LONDON --
Africa and Asia are set to grab a significant share of the global
renewables market in the next year at the expense of European markets,
according to research released today.
In the latest edition of its quarterly Renewable Energy Country Attractiveness Index (RECAI),
consultancy EY predicts that the next 12-18 months will see the
traditionally dominant European countries lose market share to emerging
nations.
It highlights Ethiopia, Kenya, Indonesia, Malaysia and Uruguay as the
countries most likely to muscle-in on European markets that have
limited growth potential. EY predicts “troubled offshore markets” in the U.K., Germany and the
Nordic region will find their dominance challenged by China, Japan,
Taiwan, South Korea and India, while Brazil is forecast to cement growth
not just in its wind sector but also in its nascent solar market.
As this is the first RECAI of 2014, EY uses it as an opportunity to
reflect on 2013 and highlights its choice of winners and losers in the
renewables sector. Among the winners are South Africa, which last year financially
closed its second round of renewable projects; Brazil; Chile, which has
approved 9.9 GW of projects; Turkey, which is seeing growth in its solar
sector; Japan and China.
The losers were largely European, with the exceptions being India,
which is failing to build on its renewables potential due to
infrastructure and trading mechanism issues, and Australia, which saw a
renewables policy U-turn following last September’s election. But it is Europe that is suffering the most according to EY,
particularly the traditionally dominant sectors in Germany and the U.K.
EY says that Britain is “in a spin” because of “a combination of
prolonged policy uncertainty, less-than-welcome news that mature
technologies must compete for contracts for difference [part of the
government’s new energy market reforms] from day one, and a series of
offshore wind project cancellations.”
Ben Warren, EY’s environmental finance leader, said: “The UK’s fading
appeal is the direct result of the lack of clarity on the government’s
long-term energy strategy at a time when energy security is a concern
and investors are looking for commitment.
“Recent announcements around CfDs have been perceived by some
investors as a risk to investment stability, for onshore wind in
particular, given the regime changes and subsidy cuts already planned.
At the same time, the U.K. offshore sector has also taken a battering,
with a number of high-profile projects being mothballed in recent
months.”
However, Warren added that “we need to keep reminding ourselves that
the U.K. market has proved itself to be the most resilient compared to
other big European markets in the past,” but stressed that “the U.K.
government and the renewables sector need to work together to regain
investors’ confidence and realise the UK market’s potential.”
Nina Skorupska, chief executive of the UK’s Renewable Energy
Association, said the UK’s waning appeal was not surprising. “Investors
are already looking at projects post-2020 but they have no clear steer
from the EU or the UK government that they see a major role for
renewables once the existing 2020 targets are met.”
Greenpeace U.K. deputy political director Joss Garman said:“This
damning report lays bare the economic cost Britain is paying for the
government’s internal squabbling and foot-dragging on clean energy.
Investors demand certainty, but what ministers have offered them is
double-talk and mixed messages. As other major economies like the U.S.
and China are embracing clean tech and reaping the rewards by attracting
investment, the U.K. is failing to capitalise on its position as a
world leader in green tech.
EY states that Germany’s renewable market “took a battering in 2013,
with September’s election prolonging discussions on how best to curb
rising energy prices. “Calls to reform the feed-in tariff programme in February 2013 and
ongoing rhetoric about ‘affordability’ were not translated into policy
statements, making developers and investors nervous and contributing to a
staggering 46 per cent fall in new investment.”
EY said that 2014 “will determine its long-term attractiveness as the new coalition’s policy plans become clearer.” In terms of trends for the global renewables sector in 2014, Warren
said “efficiency and effectiveness need to be this year’s buzzwords.”
“The market should be setting its sights on value chain integration,
consolidation on a lobal scale, repowering, transaction and capital
efficiencies and technology improvements. “Renewable energy is now a truly global market, and stakeholders must
develop a global strategy and a global supply chain, be flexible to
market changes, and be willing to go in search of new markets.”
He added that deployment challenges in China, Japan, Germany and
South Africa in 2013 highlighted the need for more robust transmission
infrastructure and efficient distribution channels.
More resource and investment is required in grid management,
digitalised supply and demand management, distributed applications and
the commercialisation of storage technology, if the sector is to address
transmission bottlenecks and intermittency challenges.
Warren said: “Innovation in non-generation infrastructure and
technology will not only drive efficiencies and boost deployment, but
also represents a significant investment opportunity across both
developed and emerging markets. The digitalisation of energy in
particular will create a revolution that will have significant social,
economic and environmental impact.”
http://www.renewableenergyworld.com/rea/news/article/2014/02/europe-to-lose-renewables-grip-to-asia-and-africa
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