China Daily (Hong Kong)

Trade disputes hit solar export prices

- By XIE YU in Shanghai DU JUAN in Beijing

The value of China’s solar exports fell by almost onethird in the first half of 2013 as trade disputes took a toll on prices, an industry group said on Friday.

According to the Photovolta­ic Product Branch of the China Chamber of Commerce for the Import and Export of Machinery and Electronic Products, the value of solar cell and module exports plunged 31 percent year-on-year to $6.5 billion in the first six months.

Prices were down 41 percent, while export volume increased 17 percent, the organizati­on said on its website on Friday.

Shipments to the European Union fell about 58 percent, in contrast to a sharp rise in sales to Japan (up 150 percent), India (100 percent) and South Africa (2,200 percent).

Solar panel sales to the EU reached 21 billion euros ($27.9 billion) last year. But after the EU initiated an anti- dumping probe into Chinese solar products starting in November 2012, many Chinese panel makers had to cut prices to garner orders in Europe.

Li Junfeng, head of the China Renewable Energy Industry Associatio­n, which is under the National Developmen­t and Reform Commission, said the industry’s biggest problem is still excess capacity.

“Some companies have shifted their focus from overseas markets to domestic sales or turned to downstream activities. These are good ways to adapt to the situation,” he said.

China’s solar industry, which is the largest in the world, has been buffeted by trade disputes with the EU and United States. As a result, it’s looking actively for new domestic customers and for buyers in new markets such as Japan.

However, 90 percent of China’s solar companies’ production was exported in 2012, making the domestic market an ever-more important alternativ­e.

The Chinese government has been working to increase demand in the domestic market. In July, it raised the 2015 target for cumulative installed photovolta­ic capacity to 35 million kilowatts from 21 million kW previously.

The National Energy Administra­tion plans to set up distribute­d solar PV demonstrat­ion power plants across the country, and large Stateowned enterprise­s are becoming active in the sector.

SOEs, including Huaneng Power Internatio­nal Inc, China Datang Corp and China Guodian Corp, will participat­e in building distribute­d solar plants, with total investment reaching 29.4 billion yuan ($4.8 billion), the National Business Daily reported on Friday.

The higher target for PV capacity “signals the nation’s determinat­ion to develop solar energy is stronger than market expectatio­ns. Industry insiders said they believe specific subsidy policies will be announced in August. Contact the writers at xieyu@ chinadaily.com.cn and dujuan@chinadaily.com.cn

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