Houston Chronicle

Big solar manufactur­ers shift their focus

Utility contracts scarcer, so they turn away from giant installati­ons

- By Christophe­r Martin and Brian Eckhouse

The top two U.S. solar manufactur­ers are shifting away from the biggest domestic market because utilities aren’t signing as many deals to buy electricit­y from their giant power plants.

SunPower Corp. the No. 2 U.S. panel maker, said Tuesday it’s turning its attention to rooftop power, while First Solar, the biggest producer, now expects more of its growth to come from selling panels to other companies.

The two companies built some of the biggest solar farms in the world, projects that would never have been completed unless utilities had agreed to buy the power. Because of a shift in tax policy at the end of 2015, those power plant deals are slowing, which may drag down results.

“Certainly 2017 will be a difficult year in power plants,” SunPower CEO Tom Werner said during a conference call Tuesday. “The power plant market is unlikely to improve in America in the next few quarters. It will in time.”

The culprit is the federal investment tax credit, which for years has been one of the biggest drivers of the U.S. solar industry. It was scheduled to expire at the end of this year, but it got an unexpected fiveyear extension in December. To qualify, constructi­on must begin before the deadline, so developers need to line up a powerpurch­ase agreement, or PPA, many months before that.

While the solar industry was pleased, the timing made things tricky. There was a surge of contracts signed in 2015 as companies rushed to meet the earlier deadline. Now there’s no rush, and developers’ pipelines have been depleted.

About 8 gigawatts of big solar farms will go into operation in the U.S. this year, almost double the 4.4 gigawatts in 2015, according to Bloomberg New Energy Finance. That’s the legacy of deals signed in the past. And with utility contracts scarce now, that will slip 11 percent to 7.1 gigawatts in 2017.

“Because the tax credit got extended — which of course was a good thing — there’s less of an urgency for utility customers to sign contracts,” Pavel Molchanov, an analyst at Raymond James Financial, said in an interview.

The utility solar market will eventually recover, driven by state clean-energy requiremen­ts, global efforts to curb carbon emissions and in the U.S., the investment tax credit. Â

“What is currently a headwind could well become a tailwind in the notso-distant future,” Molchanov said.

More immediatel­y, SunPower said it expects to lose as much as $175 million this year, a shift from May when it forecast net income of as much as $50 million, largely because demand for utility-scale solar projects is slowing and competitio­n is dragging down panel prices. The company is closing a manufactur­ing plant in the Philippine­s and plans to fire 15 percent of his workforce while shifting focus to the rooftop market, where it expects “sustained strong industry growth,” Werner said on the call.

In contrast, the utility segment “did not have enough legacy PPAs to cover the year,” he said. “That was part of the reguide and that became clear as we got into the second quarter.”

 ?? Michael Macor / San Francisco Chronicle ?? The California Valley Solar Farm near Santa Margarita, Calif., has 749,088 solar panels. Because of a shift in tax policy at the end of 2015, big solar plant deals are slowing.
Michael Macor / San Francisco Chronicle The California Valley Solar Farm near Santa Margarita, Calif., has 749,088 solar panels. Because of a shift in tax policy at the end of 2015, big solar plant deals are slowing.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States