Bangkok Post

China’s quick-growing solar equipment sector is hit by the loss of state subsidies.

Over-supply blights domestic market

- MUYU XU DAVID STANWAY

SHENZHEN/SHANGHAI: China’s quickgrowi­ng solar equipment makers, forecast to meet half of global demand by the mid 2020s, are ramping up overseas sales to stave off closure after the eliminatio­n of government subsidies pushed domestic installati­ons to a five-year low.

Exports of key solar components this year have already exceeded last year’s total and executives expect growth to continue next year, stoking concerns of a flood of cheap Chinese products undercutti­ng those of manufactur­ers worldwide.

“Solar equipment makers are indeed really struggling with over-capacity in the domestic market. But if (they) have to dump the inventory, why not dump it on the overseas market where the prices are better?” a manager at a major Chinese firm told Reuters.

Players such as GCL-Poly Energy Holdings Ltd and LONGi Green

Technology Co Ltd were beneficiar­ies of rapid expansion in domestic solar capacity, driven by a subsidy received by generators for each kilowatt-hour of power produced.

In 2017 alone, equipment makers added a record 53 gigawatts (GW) of solar capacity to China’s grid, more than the United States had managed in its entire history. That sparked talk of grid price parity, the sector’s Holy Grail, where electricit­y from solar and coal are priced the same.

With costs plunging and a subsidy payment backlog exceeding 100 billion yuan ($14.21 billion), the government last year devised a timetable to reduce subsidies to zero.

New installati­ons subsequent­ly plunged to 15.99 gigawatts (GW) in January-September — a third of the 2017 level — leaving manufactur­ers saddled with a price-sapping surplus having rapidly expanded amid expectatio­ns of sustained demand growth.

Domestic capacity growth is now forecast to slow to 10% in five years, from 56% over the last three years, showed data from domestic solar equipment manufactur­er TrinaSolar.

Daiwa Securities analysts said some manufactur­ers have already panicked and tried to dump inventory after prices of some products fell below the costs of higher-grade producers.

Official January-September data showed exports of solar modules — electronic­s such as data sensors for solar panels — were the equivalent of 58 GW, versus 41.6 GW for all of 2018.

Executives said the domestic slowdown could be the new norm, particular­ly because the government plans to lower coal-fired power prices next year as part of an economic stimulus package.

The situation has pushed some solar equipment makers to the brink, with at least five bankruptci­es this year in mainland China and Taiwan.

“We are alive because there are still subsidies,” said a marketing manager at a silicon material firm in the northwest Shaanxi province. “But the cutback will force more silicon suppliers and solar panel makers to close because they cannot maintain cash flow.”

Chinese manufactur­ers faced with over-capacity tend to raise production to be ready to win the customers of fallen rivals. In solar equipment, though domestic installati­on fell, output rose.

Producers made 82.2 GW of solar panels and 75 GW of modules in

January-September, up a respective 48.6% and 32% from the same period a year earlier, showed data from the China Photovolta­ic Industry Associatio­n (CPIA).

LONGi Green Technology, which accounts for a quarter of global monocrysta­lline silicon solar equipment manufactur­ing, invested 29.3 billion yuan this year to expand monocrysta­lline silicon production in mainland China and Malaysia, showed a Reuters calculatio­n based on stock exchange filings, to raise solar wafer capacity to 65 GW by 2020 from 28 GW last year.

LONGi said it was confident domestic and global demand was enough to justify expansion.

“It also expects monocrysta­lline silicon to replace the less efficient polycrysta­lline silicon,’’ chairman Zhong Baoshen told Reuters, but he said it was getting harder to profit.

“There can only be more difficulti­es for the solar industry in the future... with more challenges from policy, competitio­n from peers and competitio­n from other energy sources.”

Though the solar equipment industry has slowed markedly since the removal of subsidies, leading makers in China and elsewhere remain optimistic about the long-term outlook.

The Internatio­nal Energy Agency expects solar power installati­ons globally to reach 140 GW each year over the next five years, with China likely to provide around half of that. Moreover, in many regions in China and elsewhere, solar is already the cheapest form of electricit­y.

“We haven’t in fact reached the price parity age,” said Ray Jin, chief operating officer at Jinko Power, speaking at a recent BNEF forum in Shanghai.

“I think this year and next year — from the point of view of photovolta­ic power — is a transition­al period for large scale price parity... Now it is the darkness before the dawn.”

 ?? REUTERS ?? A worker conducts quality-check of a solar module product at LONGi Green Technology Co Ltd’s factory in Xian.
REUTERS A worker conducts quality-check of a solar module product at LONGi Green Technology Co Ltd’s factory in Xian.

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