Official figures from China’s National Energy Administration have
shown that the country only installed 7.7 GW of new solar in the first
half of 2015. The National Energy Administration (NEA) also admitted that
congestion on the grid caused by a higher share of solar energy forced
9% of total installed solar PV to sit idle for the first 6 months of
2015.
The official figures show
that China installed 7.73 GW of solar in the first half of this year,
made up of 6.69 GW of utility-scale solar and the remaining 1.04 GW
from distributed solar, but none of this is very surprising, according
to experts. PV-Tech relayed the thoughts
of Beijing-based solar industry consultant, Frank Haugwitz, who was
unsurprised by China’s solar figures. “The fairly large share of
utility-scale is no surprise, given the myriad of prevailing constraints
attached to classical distributed projects,” he said. “If you look at
the provincial breakdown, it’s no surprise that a few provinces so far
underperformed, in other cases it’s rather the opposite, they
out-perform.”
Likewise, Greentech Media launched a stinging attack on China’s solar industry, claiming that there is yet “another reason we can’t fully trust China’s solar installation numbers.” US-based solar proponents have often been critical of China’s solar
industry, unhappy to lose out in installation figures. However, as Greentech Media
points out, there are some legitimate reasons why all may not be as it
seems, if one only looks at the officially-provided figures. They quote a
Bloomberg report from January that showed 23% of panels
sampled around China failed to meet the country’s own technical
standards, and added that “project owners have faced interconnection
delays, which served to cut installations by 3 gigawatts in 2014
compared to 2013 levels.”
Such stories shine a new light on past stories, therefore. In April, China revealed
that it had installed 5.04 GW of new solar in the first quarter of the
year. If this is the case, then only 2.69 GW was installed in the second
quarter, with no real way to measure what of that was left idle or
actually connected and used.
http://cleantechnica.com/2015/07/30/china-solar-installations-7-7-gigawatts-in-1st-half-of-2015/
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