New research conducted by NPD Solarbuzz and featured on their blog
this past week shows that Japanese solar photovoltaic “PV” installations
have now passed 10 GW for cumulative PV capacity, only the fifth
country to reach the mark. Of the previous four — Germany, Italy, China,
and the US — the latter two only reached the milestone within the past
few months, highlighting Japan’s achievement.
Japan Hits 10 GW Milestone
- The Ministry of Economy, Trade and Industry (METI) launched a subsidy program for residential PV systems as far back as 1994. Initially, the subsidy covered 50% of the cost of PV systems. The budget for FY 1994 was 2 billion Yen.
- Until 2005, Japan had the largest installed PV capacity of any country in the world. This early leadership position was achieved through a well-managed set of programs, coupled with attractive market incentives.
- The early growth of the Japanese PV market was a strong factor in establishing Japanese manufacturing as the first dominant force in the solar PV industry. Manufacturers that benefited from the first phase of government initiatives include several of the companies that are now leaders in the domestic PV industry revival: Sharp, Sanyo and Kyocera.
In the Face of Fukushima
Sadly, another factor that has to be considered in Japan’s recent
increase in solar PV installation must be the fallout from the Fukushima
Daiichi nuclear ‘disaster’ which followed the massive earthquake and
subsequent tsunami on March 11, 2011. Corollary evidence might suggest
that the launch of the feed-in tariff program in July 2012 which was
focused towards fostering the development and installation of renewable
energy throughout the country was a direct response to the subsequent
shut down of all of Japan’s nuclear reactors in the wake of the
disaster. Regardless of the why, however, this feed-in tariff has been
instrumental in accelerating the deployment of large-scale renewable
technologies, helping the country’s PV market grow rapidly over the past
12 months.
2013 Sees Regular Growth
There is a litany of Japanese solar stories covered here on CleanTechnica to
back up these numbers, not the least of which was a report published in
March of this year that predicted the number of Japanese solar
installations would overtake the US and Germany this year.
As mentioned earlier, IMS Research — a part of IHS – predicted earlier this year that
“[the] Japanese [PV] market is set to grow by 120 percent in 2013 and
install more than 5 gigawatts (GW) of new capacity … with installations
expected to exceed 1 GW in the first quarter alone.” At the end of May, IHS followed up their earlier report,
revealing that not only had Japan reached the 1 GW mark for
installations in the first quarter, but that they had installed 1.5 GW,
“a stunning 270 percent in the first quarter of 2013″, and were on track
to become the “world’s largest solar revenue market in 2013″. While the
Japanese Agency for Natural Resources and Energy reported that Japan
had added 1,240 MW of solar installations in April and May.
Again borrowing from Colville’s piece on the Solarbuzz website,
Japan’s PV industry has benefited greatly from renewed interest in the
sector, resulting in;
- Cumulative solar PV installed in Japan broke through the 10 GW barrier during August 2013 and exceeded 10.5 GW at the end of August.
- Until the end of 2012, the Japanese PV market had been heavily weighted towards the rooftop segment, with 97% of PV capacity.
- During the first eight months of 2013, the ground-mount segment has accounted for 27% of new solar PV capacity installed.
- Over the first three quarters of calendar year 2013, Japan is forecast to install more PV capacity than during the entire three-year period spanning 2010 to 2012.
- At the end of August 2013, rooftop solar PV installations remain the dominant type of PV installations by project number and by MW volume, with 89% of market share by capacity. The remaining 11% is spread across the ground-mount and off-grid segments.
Writing more recently, Giles Parkinson from RenewEconomy recently noted
that “China, Japan, and the US will compete for domination in the
coming years,” while noting that fresh faces are going to be growing up
over that same period, with “strong markets in the rest of Asia, Africa
and South America … also emerging.”
Looking back over the past few months of the year, we can see just
how efficiently the Japanese solar PV industry has been working. Earlier this month
it was revealed that Japan was one of only two countries to be home to a
competing solar module manufacturer, outside of China (which is
dominating the sector). In May it was revealed that by February of this year, Japan had 12.2 GW of new solar installations in the pipeline, including a 400 MW solar power park approved for installation on a remote Japanese island located off the southern coast. Again in May, the Deutsche Bank noted that the Japanese market could reach an annual “run rate” of 7 to 9 GW.
Japanese Solar in the Future
Looking forward, new figures from the Mercom Capital Group reiterate
their earlier estimations of a global installation forecast for solar PV
of approximately 38 GW by the end of the year, including 8.5 GW
installed in China, 7 in Japan, and another 4.5 in the US.
“After years of overcapacity, bankruptcies and record low prices we
are now seeing price stabilization, higher capacity utilization rates
and a move towards supply-demand equilibrium,” explained Mercom Capital
Co-Founder and CEO Raj Prabhu in a blog post. “Market
conditions for solar look much better than they did just three months
ago and we are reiterating our global installation forecast of ~38 GW
for 2013. One of the big overhangs, the China-EU trade case, has been
settled, which could have otherwise set off an all-out trade war. This
brings some sorely needed certainty to the market.”
A Challenging Future
Both NPD Solarbuzz and Mercom are predicting challenges ahead for
Japan, however, with module supply shortages, grid connection issues,
and overcapacity concerns. Mercom note that there are reports suggesting
“some of the PV project [applications] are getting rejected citing
overcpacity and grid stability issues,” adding that the Ministry of
Economy, Trade, and Industry have admitted that “some of the facilities
approved have not begun construction and they are conducting a survey to
find reasons behind the delays including whether there is a shortage of
materials.”
All in all, Japan’s solar industry is heading in a good direction,
and minus a few bumps along the way, it will be no real surprise to see
Japan at the top of solar PV tables for years to come.
http://cleantechnica.com/2013/09/13/japan-solar-pv-industry-reaches-10-gw-milestone/
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