
Solar PV Breaks Records in 2010
Oct. 27, 2011 - J. Matthew Roney - earth-policy.org
Solar photovoltaic (PV) companies manufactured
a record 24,000 megawatts of PV cells worldwide in
2010, more than doubling their 2009 output. Annual
PV production has grown nearly 100-fold since 2000,
when just 277 megawatts of cells were made. Newly
installed PV also set a record in 2010, as 16,600
megawatts were installed in more than 100 countries.
This brought the total worldwide capacity of solar
PV to nearly 40,000 megawatts—enough to power
14 million European homes.

Made of semiconductor materials, PV cells convert
solar radiation directly into electricity. Rectangular
panels consisting of numerous PV cells can be linked
into arrays of various sizes and power output capabilities—from
rooftop systems measured in kilowatts to ground-mounted
arrays of hundreds or even thousands of megawatts.
(One megawatt equals 1,000 kilowatts.)
There are two main types of PV—traditional
crystalline silicon and newer thin-film PV. In
2010, crystalline silicon production was more than
double the output of 2009, accounting for over
80 percent of all PV produced. While thin-film
production did not keep pace, it still grew by
more than 60 percent. First Solar, a U.S. firm,
maintained its leadership role in thin-film production,
accounting for over 40 percent of world output,
most of it produced in Malaysia.
Data provided to Earth Policy Institute by GTM
Research show that Chinese manufacturers again
dominated the global industry in 2010, with close
to 11,000 megawatts of PV cell production. (See
data.) This was the seventh consecutive year in
which China at least doubled its PV output. Taiwan
was a distant second with 3,600 megawatts produced,
followed by Japan with 2,200 megawatts, Germany
with 2,000 megawatts, and the United States with
1,100. The top five countries thus accounted for
82 percent of total world PV production.
While Germany ranks fourth in solar cell manufacturing,
it towers above all other countries in terms of
actual electricity generation from solar panels.
Germany has widened its lead in this category each
year since overtaking Japan in 2004 and, after
adding 7,400 megawatts in 2010, now boasts 17,200
megawatts of installed PV. This is more than 40
percent of global capacity and over four times
the 3,800 megawatts in Spain, the number two country.
PV in Germany now generates enough electricity
to meet the power demand of some 3.4 million German
homes.

Japan installed close to 1,000 megawatts of new
PV capacity in 2010. It is the third-ranked country
in installed PV, with a total of 3,600 megawatts.
As solar adoption accelerates in Japan, its national
target of 28,000 megawatts by 2020 may be easily
surpassed, especially as the country weighs energy
alternatives following the March 2011 Fukushima nuclear
disaster.
By nearly doubling its total PV power capacity
in 2010, Italy vaulted past the United States to
claim the fourth position in the world solar rankings,
with 3,500 megawatts. With an expected 8,000 megawatts
of new PV in 2011, likely overtaking Germany in
new installations, Italy will have already exceeded
its official 2020 goal of 8,000 megawatts. Enel,
Italy’s leading utility, sees the country
reaching 30,000 megawatts by 2020—enough
to satisfy half of its current residential electricity
needs.
PV capacity in the United States also saw strong
growth in 2010, increasing by more than 50 percent
to reach 2,500 total megawatts. California, which
now has more than 1,000 megawatts connected to
the grid, again led all states in new PV installations.
But a number of other states, including New Jersey,
Nevada, and Arizona, are ramping up their solar
capacity as well, driven by programs and incentives
at the state and federal levels.
Until very recently, China’s status as PV
manufacturing powerhouse had not translated into
much solar generation at home, as panels were seen
as too expensive in the domestic market. While
the vast majority of Chinese-made PV is sent abroad,
a growing government commitment to increasing solar
power as part of the energy mix is now catalyzing
substantial PV capacity gains. Total installed
PV in China grew 140 percent to nearly 900 megawatts
in 2010. This was the first full year for the national
Golden Sun program, which covers half the investment
and grid connection costs of a solar project. It
is expected to result in at least 1,000 megawatts
of new installations each year after 2012.
Furthermore, in August 2011 China’s main
economic planning agency announced it was implementing
a national PV feed-in tariff. This policy tool,
now used by more than 60 countries, is behind most
of the PV already installed worldwide. A feed-in
tariff typically guarantees generators of renewable
electricity a long-term purchase price for each
kilowatt-hour they produce and “feed into” the
grid, providing a powerful incentive for installing
such systems. Together the Golden Sun program and
the new feed-in tariff are likely to push China’s
PV capacity to at least double again in 2011—and
may help explain why the country’s solar
power targets for 2015 and 2020 have reportedly
risen to 10,000 and 50,000 megawatts, respectively.
Although the cost of PV has fallen substantially
over the decades, solar-generated electricity is
not yet widely price-competitive with electricity
generated by heavily subsidized fossil fuels. If
the full cost of burning fossil fuels, including
health effects and the costs of climate change,
were incorporated into the price of electricity,
PV would quickly be revealed as one of the least
expensive sources of power.
As system costs continue to drop, the PV landscape
is evolving to include not only traditional small-scale
PV installations but also utility-scale parks of
tens, hundreds, or even thousands of megawatts.
An 80-megawatt PV park completed in Canada in 2010
was the world’s largest until September 2011,
when a newly-expanded PV complex of close to 150
megawatts in northeastern Germany claimed the title.
As of late 2011, the United States had 48 PV projects
of 100 megawatts or more in the pipeline, including
a 5,000-megawatt park to be sited on degraded farmland
in California’s San Joaquin Valley. At peak
generation, this solar facility’s electricity
output would rival that of five large nuclear power
plants.
Multi-megawatt projects are also under development
in India as part of the National Solar Mission
that was announced in late 2009. Though the country
had just 100 megawatts of installed PV capacity
at the end of 2010, the goal is for some 22,000
megawatts of solar power—half PV and half
concentrating solar power—to be installed
by 2022. The western state of Gujarat alone plans
to have 3,000 megawatts installed by 2015.
Part of the National Solar Mission’s PV expansion
is destined for rural areas where millions lack
access to electricity. As is the case in many other
developing countries, there is vast potential in
India for PV to provide power in places without
an electric grid. Installing small solar systems
on homes is often much less expensive than building
a central power plant, with the added benefit of
greatly reducing indoor air pollution from kerosene
lamps.
Industry analysts forecast that some 21,000 megawatts
of PV will be installed globally in 2011. This
would be a marked slowdown from the doubling of
the market in 2010, but the pool of countries with
rising demand for PV still continues to grow. New
markets such as Slovakia and the United Kingdom
are among the 20 countries expected to add 100
megawatts or more in 2011, up from 13 countries
in 2010.
As PV costs drop, as concerns about climate change
grow, and as countries look to replace finite fossil
fuels with energy sources that can never run out,
the growth in solar power should continue. The
potential is practically without limit: a 2011
article published in Energy Policy shows that solar
PV deployed in suitable locations could generate
30 times the electricity currently produced worldwide.
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