Many a demand/supply PV industry participant has met their
Waterloo/Alamo — choose your dramatic historical analogy — on the issue
of pricing strategy. Figure 1(below) is a snapshot of PV industry
average selling prices (ASP) for modules and demand for module products
(as well as systems) from 2002 through 2012.
During this ten year period ASPs declined by a compound annual rate
of -12 percent, with demand increasing by CAGR of 48 percent. Compound
annual growth and decline rates smooth over the natural bumpiness in a
market; for example, in 2006 over 2005, ASPs increased by 12 percent and
increased by 3 percent in 2007 over 2006 before beginning several years
of often dramatic decreases. Noting the crossover point in and around
2009, the equilibrium price for modules (theoretically the point at
which seller and buyer maximize value) would have been ~$1.50. Of
course, there is theory, and there is the real market. The real market
will almost never behave according to theory, thus spawning many new
theories.
Aggressive pricing for market share has come and gone in the PV
industry since its inception. Traditionally, buyers of PV cells and
modules have had the most control over the price function. This is
because sales of PV systems, particularly into the grid connected
application, have relied close to 100 percent on government and utility
demonstration projects and on incentives — that is, demand was ‘push’
not ‘pull’ market.
During the early days of the feed in tariff in Europe (which
coincided with a shortage of polysilicon) demand pull was artificially
created by the profitable FiT instrument. Manufacturers of cells and
modules were then able to charge a premium. Unfortunately, this also
coincided with a disastrous period of aggressive pricing as well as
capacity building. Currently, with buyer expectations set as to price
(meaning low prices for modules and for systems), the best the industry
can hope for on the cell and module side of the supply/demand equation,
is stability — that is, for prices to settle and stay flat until cost
improvements can catch up.
Supply: One Day You’re On Top, One Day You're Not
As any PV manufacturer of cells and modules knows, even costs are not
100 percent controllable, so, the cost curve is also bumpy though less
bumpy than the price curve. Costs for inputs, including consumables,
increase and decrease given market dynamics; and currency adjustments
for global buyers and sellers can be, well a real …
Table 1 (below) offers the top ten manufactures of PV c-Si and thin
film technologies from 2007 through 2012. This table offers a supply
perspective, that is, manufacturers of c-Si and thin film cells or
modules. Note that this table includes companies that were formerly the
top sellers, Q-Cells and Suntech for example, and who are now either
acquired, otherwise occupied with recovering or, potentially not
recovering.
One method of lowering costs that has a historical (though not
necessarily successful) basis, is to attempt to leapfrog over the
traditional time (years and years and years) from R&D through pilot
scale to commercial production by developing champion (or lab) cell
technology on commercial manufacturing lines. Typically manufacturers
discover that instant gratification in PV manufacturing is almost always
(leaving room for miracles) unachievable. However, cost reduction is a
vital and necessary manufacturing function — in PV, higher efficiency
and lower cost are twin goals. Quality is a goal that should never be
shortchanged for demand and supply side participants.
Table 2 (below) offers regional supply shifts, that is, sales of c-Si
and thin film cells and modules from 1997 through 2012. As with the
top ten lists of manufacturers, overtime, regionals shifts are common.
Note that the U.S. was the shipment leader in 1997, Japan the shipment
leader from 1999 through 2006 and Europe the shipment leader in 2007 and
2008. Manufacturers in China have dominated shipments since 2009. It
is worth noting that despite regional dominance, PV manufacturers have
traditionally battled constrained margins.
Demand, Off-Grid, Grid-Connected and Regional Shifts
It has not been easy for the demand side of the PV industry to
maintain healthy margins or regional dominance. Figure 2 (below) offers
demand growth by region from 2000 through 2012. Note that Europe
dominated demand from 2004 through 2012. Recalling Table 2, despite
dominating demand, Europe’s manufacturers only enjoyed two years of a
controlling market share.
A significant demand side presence (installers, system integrators,
distributors) grew up in Europe along with the FiT-driven demand. At
one point Europe accounted for over 80 percent of all global demand.
Figure 3 (below) presents the demand picture for 2012 and an estimate
for 2013. As the FITs have declined, disappeared and changed (often
retroactively), both demand and supply side participant have been forced
to seek new markets for PV modules and systems. These new markets are
less profitable, nor are they easy to penetrate.
Currently, and likely for the longterm, PPA, tender and tariff rates
are set by bid. Bidding in a vehicle that, other than art auctions and
the like, tends to hold prices and margins down (low bidders may lose,
but so will high bidders and the mid-range is not always the winner). PV
industry participants had several years to develop new markets,
however, a tantalizingly (albeit briefly) profitable FIT market was
difficult to ignore and it was hard for many to justify expending effort
on developing emerging markets.
And Now…
The PV industry has successfully commoditized its product and is now
maturing business models that will, hopefully, allow for more reasonable
and sustainable margins. The lease model is one that, in its various
iterations, is being pursued by solar firms as well as investors. Third
party ownership, however, is unlikely to be a panacea for everything
that ails — and has historically ailed — the PV industry. Vertical
integration (typically, manufacturing owning a system business) will
also not ameliorate decades worth of strategic missteps. Neither
vertical integration nor leasing is new to solar. These strategic tools
have been in the industry toolbox for decades. So has educating the
system buyer as to the true value of independence from utility rate
volatility. Now that margin recovery APPEARS (note that this is in
caps) to be returning, it’s time for a long term strategy to refocus and
plan for the future.
http://www.renewableenergyworld.com/rea/news/article/2013/08/the-solar-pricing-struggle
No comments:
Post a Comment