
Europe loses PV market lead to Asia in 2013
At the EPIA’s 9th Market Workshop in Brussels the organization revealed that the global PV cumulative installed capacity reached 136.7 GW at the end of 2013.
The figures indicate that Europe lost its leading role in the PV market in 2013. While it concentrated more than 70% of the world’s new PV installations in 2011 and still around 59% a year later, with more than 10 GW of new capacity installed in 2013, Europe only accounted for 28% of the world’s market.
Dynamic Asian markets, led by China and Japan (around 11.3 GW and 6.9 GW respectively), partially explain this trend reversal, as the Asia-Pacific region represented 57% of 2013’s global market. The trend is expected to continue, with China experiencing sustained volumes which should enable the country to remain the number-one market in the coming years.
Germany was the top performing European market in 2013 with 3.3 GW (down from 7.6 GW in 2012). Several European markets were close to the gigawatt mark: Italy (between 1.1 GW and 1.4 GW), UK (in between 1 GW and 1.2 GW), Romania (1.1 GW) and Greece (1.04 GW).
"In a number of European countries, harsh support reduction, retrospective measures and unplanned changes to regulatory frameworks that badly affect investors’ confidence and PV investments viability have led to a significant market decrease", said Gaëtan Masson, EPIA Head of Business Intelligence. This is particularly the case for Italy – third global market in 2012 – which experienced a 70% market decrease compared to the year before. Germany – formerly the top global market – also experienced in 2013 a steep PV market decrease (57% decrease compared to 2012), originating from intentional regulatory changes.
"Despite our preliminary 2013 results, solar photovoltaics remains on the way to becoming a major source of energy for Europe and the world. Last year, PV was the second new source of electricity generation installed in Europe. From 0.3% of Europe’s electricity needs in 2008, PV already covers as much as 3% only five years later", added Winfried Hoffmann, EPIA President. "Only with coherent, dynamic, stable and predictable support policies can Europe regain a leading position in the energy revolution and further develop PV markets. In view of that, a truly ambitious climate and energy policy framework for 2030, that would include a meaningful and binding renewables target for each individual Member State, is absolutely crucial".
Related articles and links:
News articles:
Suntech targets UK PV market to fuel growth
IBC solar cell achieves efficiency of 24.4 percent
Graphene nanoflakes deliver threefold solar panel efficiency increase
CdTe solar cell grabs conversion efficiency world record
