
NPD Solarbuzz: North American solar PV installations
to exceed 2.2GW in 2011
Nov. 29. 2011 - Mark Osborne - pv-tech.org
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| US market to triple by 2015 and is still on course to reach 1.95GW of new installations in 2011, double 2010 levels. |
Fear, uncertainty and doubt are ever present in
the North American PV market, according to the
latest ‘North America PV Markets Quarterly’ report
from NPD Solarbuzz. In the US, issues over module
dumping from China and the expiration of the US
federal cash grant do not help, but there is growing
concern of the feed-in tariff system in Ontario,
Canada, not least as it is responsible for 99%
of the Canadian PV market.
However, the market research firm still expects
the US market to triple by 2015 and is still on
course to reach 1.95GW of new installations in
2011, double 2010 levels. NPD Solarbuzz said that
the US PV market grew by 32% in Q3'11, compared
to the previous quarter and is projected to account
for 84% of North American demand in the fourth
quarter. Ontario is expected to account for the
remaining 16%.
“PV is now positioned to take significant
market share from other energy sources as it approaches
grid parity in some regions. Downstream companies
are facing enormous challenges to adapt to rapidly
changing channel structure and business models
in order to successfully participate in that opportunity,” said
Craig Stevens, president of NPD Solarbuzz.
Regions driving growth in North America include
California, which remains the largest single market
in Q4’11, with 21% of market share. Ontario
is forecast to become the second-largest region
(16%), followed by New Jersey (11%).
Ground-mount installations are forecast to have
38% of the market in the fourth quarter, followed
by building-mount and non-residential systems (>100kW),
which will have 37% of the market. The ground-mount
segment is benefiting from demand from Ontario
and from large-scale installations in California
and Arizona geared toward meeting the state RPS
requirements.
According to the market research firm, the US
federal government played a key role in providing
investment tax credits (ITC), cash grants, depreciation
bonuses and loan guarantees totalling over US$1.4
billion by the end of the third quarter, which
was equivalent to 800MW of installed capacity.
Despite concerns, the North American market should
triple in size by 2015, with ground-mount installations
securing 42% of the market.
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