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Some European solar firms heading to US

Cost of producing panels seems much lower in China “China is expanding solar output and now accounts for 80% of the world’s solar manufactur­ing capacity.”

- Wood Mackenzie

FREIBERG (GERMANY): European government­s, due to move to support their solar power manufactur­ers this week, will be too late to stop solar panel maker Meyer Burger packing up a German factory to send production to the United States.

The plant here in eastern Germany closed in mid-march with the loss of 500 jobs, as the Swiss-listed firm joined a growing list of European renewable energy manufactur­ing factories shutting down or moving.

In the past year, at least 10 have said they are in financial difficulti­es.

On a recent visit to the site, giant white robotic arms hung dormant over empty wooden pallets as workers prepared the last production line for shutdown.

Talks with the German federal government to try to secure a future for the factory ended without success in late March, a company spokespers­on told Reuters.

Germany’s economy ministry said it was aware of the “very serious situation” of German companies and has been examining funding options with the industry for over a year.

It agreed to give Meyer Burger an export credit guarantee for equipment produced in Germany to be used at the US factories, which will help a site nearby but won’t save the one in Freiberg.

The closure, which in one sweep reduced European solar panel production by 10%, comes despite a boom in wind and solar energy in Europe.

Additions to renewable energy capacity, including solar panels, are running at record pace, according to data from the Internatio­nal Energy Agency.

But Europe-based manufactur­ers that supply those panels are being crushed by competitio­n from China and the United States, whose government­s give more support to their producers.

The situation poses a dilemma for European government­s keen to fight climate change: Either offer more support to ensure local production can stay competitiv­e, or allow the unfettered flow of imports to keep up the pace of installati­ons.

A meeting in Brussels between European energy ministers yesterday will make a gesture of support for the struggling industry.

“China is expanding solar output and now accounts for 80% of the world’s solar manufactur­ing capacity. The cost of producing panels there is around 12 US cents per watt of energy generated, compared with 22 US cents in Europe,” said research firm Wood Mackenzie.

US subsidies announced as part of the 2022 Inflation Reduction Act allow some renewable energy manufactur­ers and project developers to claim tax credits, which are attracting businesses from within the European Union and beyond.

Meyer Burger said its plans include a solar panel factory in Arizona and a solar cell factory in Colorado.

“We made a bold move in the absence of any industry policy support in Europe and shifted a solar cell expansion project from Germany to the United States,” said its chief executive Gunter Erfurt.

Similarly, battery company Freyr which operates mostly in Norway, has stopped work at a half-finished plant near the Arctic Circle and is focusing on plans for a plant in the US state of Georgia after Washington announced the policy.

Freyr said in February it had changed its registrati­on to the United States from Luxembourg.

“We did spend quite a bit of time trying to really make sure that we weren’t committing a mistake,” said Birger Steen, chief executive of Freyr.

The company first hunted for support from Norwegian or European government­s.

“We got to the point where we concluded that that form of policy level response was not forthcomin­g.”

Asked to comment, Norway’s ministry of trade and industry said that it had launched an industrial policy framework targeting energy transition technologi­es including solar and batteries, but did not directly address questions about additional funding for the companies in this story.

Voluntary charter

At yesterday’s meeting, industry associatio­n Solar Power Europe will launch a voluntary charter for government­s and companies to sign in support of solar manufactur­ing plants. But the charter, which said that buyers of solar panels should include some domestic production in what they buy, is not enforceabl­e, Solar Power Europe said.

Michael Bloss, European Union (EU) parliament member for Greens, launched a petition earlier this month calling for action at a European level to rescue panel manufactur­ers.

Bloss said he is pushing for the European Commission to set up a €200mil (Us$213mil) fund to buy up unused European-made solar panels, but Europe has been unwilling to pursue that. The European Commission declined to comment.

“We are – in headlines and Sunday speeches – very much in favour of creating our own solar industry, but then in action, nothing happens,” Bloss said.

“The charter will be more like a political declaratio­n signed by member states, solar companies and the commission, it’s more long term, it has no immediate effect.”

In February, European policymake­rs adopted the Net-zero Industry Act, a set of measures including a target to produce 40% of the region’s clean tech needs by 2030.

The previous month, the EU also approved almost Us$1bil of German state aid for a Swedish battery producer,

Northvolt, to help it set up a production plant in Germany after Northvolt threatened to take its business to the United States.

It was the first time the bloc made use of an exceptiona­l measure allowing member countries to step in with aid when there’s a risk of investment leaving Europe.

But aid for ongoing operations has not been forthcomin­g, amid political disagreeme­nt over how much public funds should go to struggling businesses.

Decisions about supporting industries or firms like Meyer Burger are down to member states, a spokespers­on for the European Commission said.

Germany’s economy and climate ministry said aid to maintain an existing company like Meyer Burger would not be legal “if there is a lack of market prospects from the company’s perspectiv­e,” said a spokespers­on.

Potential customers – renewable energy installers that depend heavily on cheap Chinese imports – have also pushed back against any new subsidies for local panels, arguing such moves could hurt them by causing consumers to postpone orders as they wait for the subsidies to kick in.

Backlog of panels

More than a year’s worth of low-price imported panels sit in European warehouses awaiting installati­on, according to consultanc­y Rystad Energy and solar panel makers. Reuters could not independen­tly verify that estimate.

That backlog could grow as Chinese capacity continues to expand, Rystad said. “If all the plans Chinese firms have announced go ahead, China’s industry will be able to make twice as many panels as are expected to be installed worldwide in 2024,” said Marius Mordal Bakke, senior analyst at Rystad.

Dresden-based Solarwatt is carrying six to nine months of stocks, up from around six weeks, its chief executive Detlef Neuhaus said in March.

The company laid off around 10% of its employees last year and says its local panel production is running at roughly one-third of capacity.

“This industry is so important for the future, we cannot allow that we are losing all our competence,” said Neuhaus.

Analysts said it’s not clear what support could actually help, because firms like Meyer Burger produce a fraction of the volumes made by those in China, or planned in the United States.

“They are tiny, so they will always struggle with volume, not just to compete with Chinese producers but also with US producers,” said Eugen Perger, senior analyst at Research Partners AG.

Clean technology

And local clean technology industries are so globally intertwine­d it’s hard for European manufactur­ers to imagine a fully independen­t supply chain.

Norway-based Norsun, which produces solar wafers – thin silicon film used in panels – said Chinese equipment is crucial to both its plant in Norway and a proposed facility in the United States.

The company has halted production at the Norway plant while it decides whether to upgrade it.

Most of the equipment for either project would have to come from China.

“There’s essentiall­y no other option,” said Carsten Rohr, chief commercial officer at Norsun.

Freiberg has been here before. Since the 1990s, companies setting up operations in the region have benefited from federal funding programmes to rebuild east Germany and help it close the gap with western Germany’s prosperity.

New industries sprang up, including in solar and semiconduc­tors. But Freiberg took a big hit in the 2010s after China’s solar industry boosted production and undercut competitor­s.

In 2020, the German government removed a cap on subsidies for solar power installati­ons which helped lift demand.

In 2021, the EU’S Green Deal signalled political support for future demand, and Russia’s full invasion of Ukraine also helped solar deployment.

Meyer Burger, which is headquarte­red in Gwatt, Switzerlan­d, only set up production in Freiberg in 2021 as the industry started coming back to life.

It refurbishe­d a bankrupt solar company’s plant that had stood unused for almost three years.

For a while it became one of the town’s largest employers, mayor Sven Krueger confirmed.

“This is the second time the German solar industry is at risk. They failed once already,” said apprentice Max Lange, 19, greeting colleagues with a silent nod as they cleaned idled machinery on the factory floor.

“If it fails again, I doubt that I will be able to pursue a career in the European solar industry, because I don’t think it will come back,” he said, wondering aloud if he might instead find work in the US solar industry. — Reuters

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