Space Travel News  
Solar Bubble To Burst In 2009 As Supply Exceeds Demand

Today's shortage of solar modules will end in 2009, when demand for solar installations will reach 8.96 GW, but supply reaches 9.57 GW. Supply will spike as the shortage of polysilicon for crystalline silicon PV begins to relax, inorganic thin-film PV capacity builds out, and new HCPV and solar thermal technologies gain a foothold.
by Staff Writers
New York NY (SPX) Mar 25, 2008
The solar industry has been on a remarkable run in recent years, attracting the attention of investors, corporations, and policymakers. This activity has inflated a bubble that's primed to burst. While growth will continue to be robust - solar industry revenues will grow at a brisk 27% annual rate to reach $70.9 billion in 2012, up from $21.2 billion in 2007 - the solar industry will look very different just two years from now.

This is the main finding according to a new report from Lux Research entitled "Solar State of the Market Q1 2008: The End of the Beginning."

"Government subsidies in countries like Japan, Germany, and Spain have helped make large-scale solar a reality, with annual installations reaching 3.43 GW in 2007," said Lux Research Senior Analyst Ted Sullivan, the report's lead author.

"During this period, solar demand has consistently outpaced supply. But the market is now approaching a tipping point: We project that the supply of solar modules will exceed demand in 2009, leading to falling prices and a shake-out among companies that aren't prepared to thrive in this new environment - particularly crystalline silicon players that haven't invested in new thin-film technologies."

To bring clarity to the solar market, Lux Research studied five solar technologies in depth:

1) crystalline silicon photovoltaics (PV), which dominate today;

2) multi-junction PV, used in high-concentrating PV (HCPV) systems;

3) inorganic thin-film PV;

4) organic and Gr�tzel PV; and

5) solar thermal.

The team built a new forecast that independently models solar supply and demand through 2012 using a rigorous, scenario-driven methodology, spanning five technologies, three application segments, and 10 countries.

inally, the team also drew on Lux Research's comprehensive database of solar finance, which contains every round of institutional venture capital (VC) funding in firms commercializing solar technology, every solar initial public offering (IPO) on a major exchange, and every solar merger and acquisition (M and A) event, worldwide, going back to 1995.

The Lux Research report finds that:

- Today's shortage of solar modules will end in 2009, when demand for solar installations will reach 8.96 GW, but supply reaches 9.57 GW. Supply will spike as the shortage of polysilicon for crystalline silicon PV begins to relax, inorganic thin-film PV capacity builds out, and new HCPV and solar thermal technologies gain a foothold.

- Oversupply will persist through 2012, growing in 2010 before the gap begins to narrow: Demand will reach 20.3 GW worth of installations in 2012 against supply of 21.2 GW.

- Shortages of polysilicon - the starting material for the crystalline silicon PV value chain - have plagued the solar market since 2005, driving spot prices as high as $450 per kilogram. While conventional wisdom has polysilicon supply constraints easing this year or next, Lux Research's comprehensive risk-weighting of 133 polysilicon construction projects finds that polysilicon constraints will last into 2010.

- Government subsidies for solar will continue to be a critical driver of demand through 2012. Subsidies in early-adopting countries like Germany, Japan, and Spain will ramp down, but new markets like China and India will introduce richer subsidies, shifting existing suppliers to new geographies and fueling domestic production.

- While the solar IPO environment has exploded since 2005 - of the 46 solar IPOs that have taken place on major exchanges since 1995, 76% have occurred in the last three years - solar IPOs dropped in 2007, as total funds raised fell 40% from 2006's level to $2.20 billion. Since 1995, the 46 solar companies that have gone public on major exchanges have raised a total of $7.33 billion and boasted combined opening valuations of $34.7 billion.

- Solar M and A has only become a factor in the last two years. All told, 41 solar M and A deals have taken place since 1995, totaling $2.48 billion - but 97% of this value has been realized since the beginning of 2006, owing largely to an acquisition spree by thin-film solar manufacturing equipment supplier Applied Materials.

The Lux Research analysis finds important implications for incumbent companies in the solar industry. "By 2010, crystalline silicon PV will be freed from polysilicon supply constraints - but it will immediately be hit with a one-two punch of slackening demand growth and increased competition from new technologies, namely inorganic thin-film PV and solar thermal," said Michael LoCascio, Senior Analyst at Lux Research.

"While sales volumes, measured in megawatts, will continue to increase, average sales prices will fall. The result is that revenues for crystalline silicon PV will drop on a year-over-year basis in 2010 for the first time in memory - which will cool the enthusiasm for venture capital funding and IPO events."

The 137-page report includes solar market sizes and forecasts from 2000 to 2012 broken down by technology, application, and country. It offers in-depth discussion of each of the five major solar technologies, providing breakdowns of the value chain for each technology, as well as benchmarks for technology variations, drivers and challenges, key companies, key events, key developments, and a technology outlook.

The report also includes a detailed analysis of all VC, IPO, and M and A activity in solar since 1995, and deeper investigations of key issues such as polysilicon supply, the maturation of inorganic thin-film PV, and government subsidies.

Related Links
Lux Research
All About Solar Energy at SolarDaily.com



Memory Foam Mattress Review
Newsletters :: SpaceDaily :: SpaceWar :: TerraDaily :: Energy Daily
XML Feeds :: Space News :: Earth News :: War News :: Solar Energy News


Mojave Desert Contributes More Than A Billion Dollars Annually To California
Sacramento CA (SPX) Mar 25, 2008
The Mojave Desert provides more than 1 billion dollars annually in economic benefits to the counties of Inyo, Kern, Riverside and San Bernardino, and the Lancaster-Palmdale area of Los Angeles County, according to Defenders of Wildlifes new economic analysis Economic Oasis: Revealing the Value of the Mojave Desert.







  • European Space Truck Jules Verne In Parking Orbit
  • New Purdue Facility Aims To Improve NASA Moon Rocket Engine
  • Space X Falcon 9 Facing More Delays As Shuttle Replacement Looms
  • SpaceX Completes Qualification Testing Of Falcon 1 Merlin Regeneratively Cooled Engine

  • Cape Canaveral Airmen Launch Delta II Rocket
  • ProStar GPS Guides Players At Arizona Golf Resort
  • Pratt And Whitney Rocketdyne Rocket Engine Powers Latest GPS Satellite Into Space
  • United Launch Alliance Launches Delta 2 For US Air Force GPS Replacement Satellite

  • US shuttle Endeavour heads home after record mission
  • Spacewalkers test new shuttle repair techniques
  • Astronauts Take A Break, Ahead Of Return Trip To Earth
  • Space Shuttle Endeavour Docks At Space Station

  • Astronauts Successfully Complete Fifth Spacewalk
  • ISS astronauts take rest day after setting up giant robot
  • Dextre Flexes It's Muscles And Gets Ready To Work On The ISS
  • Astronauts assemble Canadian robot on 7-hour walk

  • ESA Prepares ATV For ISS Docking
  • Boomerang works in space: Japanese astronaut
  • Korea's first astronaut hopes to make peace with North
  • Sci-fi guru Clarke dies in Sri Lanka

  • China To Use Jumbo Rocket For Delivery Of Lunar Rover, Space Station
  • China's Recoverable Moon Rover Expected In 2017
  • First China Spacewalk On Course For October
  • China To Launch Second Olympic Satellite In May

  • iRobot Receives Award For DARPA LANdroids Program
  • Coming soon to Japan: remote control with a wink
  • Japanese cellphones to turn into 'robot' buddies
  • Killer Military Robots Pose Latest Threat To Humanity

  • Multi-Tasking Rover Helps Pave The Way For Next Mars Mission
  • Sturdy Rover Gets No Penalty For Tilting
  • Mars Salt Deposits Point To New Place In Hunt For Ancient Traces Of Life
  • Salt Deposits May Have Evidence Of Life On Mars

  • The content herein, unless otherwise known to be public domain, are Copyright Space.TV Corporation. AFP and UPI Wire Stories are copyright Agence France-Presse and United Press International. ESA Portal Reports are copyright European Space Agency. All NASA sourced material is public domain. Additional copyrights may apply in whole or part to other bona fide parties. Advertising does not imply endorsement, agreement or approval of any opinions, statements or information provided by Space.TV Corp on any Web page published or hosted by Space.TV Corp. Privacy Statement