
Asia-Pacific to install 4.8GW in
2011
Nov. 22, 2011 - Chris Whitmore - pvtech.org
|

|
| Moser Baer's 30MW Gunthawada system is one of a number of installations contributing to the end-of-year surge in PV capacity. Image: Moser Baer |
An
end-of-year surge in the number of utility-scale PV installation in
China and India will result in installed capacity for 2011 in the Asia-Pacific
region reaching 4.8GW, according to the new Asia Pacific Major PV Markets
Quarterly report from NPD Solarbuzz.
Total installations in the region for the final
quarter of the year amounted to 2GW – a 39%
quarter-to-quarter and 130% year-on-year capacity
rise. Driving this growth was China, which accounted
for nearly half of regional demand in Q4 and by the
year's end will have connected close to 2GW. Not
only is this total the largest in Asia, but it will
also top the 1.6GW figure forecasted for the US.
And Solarbuzz is forecasting this regional growth
to carry on into 2012, with ambitious installation
targets from national governments – China's
National Energy Administration recently revised its
cumulative solar installation target by 2015 up from
10GW to 15GW – and rising internal rates of
return (IRRs) set to inspire a 45% expansion in market
size.
Outside of China, demand is being driven by already
existing or planned national incentive programmes
in countries such as India, Japan, Thailand and Malaysia,
with the latter two expected to account for an additional
700 MW of demand in 2012.
Non-residential, ground-mount systems will comprise
the majority of new installs over the coming 12 months;
by Q4 2012, the percentage of such systems will have
risen from 16% in Q1 2011 to 64%. This growth will
come at the expense of the residential sector, which
will fall from 58% in Q1 2011 to 20% in Q4 2012.
Despite all this success, market constraints and
downstream access issues still exist in most countries
in the region, presenting a headache to potential
project developers. In China and India, financing,
land use and regulatory complications present a significant
barrier to entry, while over in Australia, policy
disruptions have already forced many downstream companies
into liquidation.
“As the European markets no longer present
certain growth, the Asia Pacific markets are increasingly
the focus of international companies looking to expand.
Companies seeking to take a share of this growth
still face significant hurdles to define strategies
to successfully access the downstream value chain,” Solarbuzz
analyst Christopher Sunsong said. “These challenges,
though, are unlikely to deter their determination
to participate given the potential of this new regional
market opportunity.”
|