'Innovators must expand to developing world'
11/24/2012 22:01
Market expert tells 'Post:' Israel right to update solar tariffs; subsidies becoming less relevant.
Solar panel Photo: Courtesy
As the solar energy trend continues to expand around the world, the industry’s
innovators and entrepreneurs will need the developing world as much as the
developing world needs their technology, a market expert told The Jerusalem Post
on Wednesday.
“The current situation that we’re facing for solar right
now is a substantial overcapacity – almost twice as much capacity exists in the
world as there is demand,” said Ethan Zindler, head of policy analysis at
Bloomberg New Energy Finance.
Though not every solar production plant in
the world is currently running at full capacity, if they were, the supply of
solar equipment would be close to double the demand, he
explained.
Zindler, who manages the analysis of global policy
developments that impact renewable energy and energy efficiency, was scheduled
to speak at the Eilat-Eilot Renewable Energy Conference next week but now will
not be able to attend.
With the “astounding ramp-up” in solar equipment
production in China, what is not necessarily good news for manufacturers has
become great for those who may want to install such systems, according to
Zindler.
Those in developing countries might best benefit from the
cheapening of solar equipment, he explained. While nearly everyone in developed
countries like the US or Israel are already connected to the national
electricity grid, people in remote villages in Africa or Latin America often do
not have access to electricity.
“When you do the economics of adding a
solar system to your roof, you’re doing it in the context of – what is the cost
of the power I would otherwise get from the grid?” Zindler said.
In
villages without any power whatsoever, people who are considering adding
electricity to their infrastructure must calculate the cost of establishing
transmission systems to carry the electricity produced by coal, oil or natural
gas plants to their homes. With solar apparatuses that can operate isolated from
the grid, however, these types of assessments do not have to occur, he
explained.
“[Solar] really does have a massive opportunity for bringing
hundreds of millions of people electricity for the first time,” Zindler
said.
With solar modules now costing less than half of what they did two
years ago, the industry “has never been cheaper or more economically competitive
than it is right now,” he stressed. “It has become much more reasonable than
ever and this is obviously bodes well for a higher level of
installations.”
Because of the significant decrease in expenses involved
with installing solar energy production devices, governments across the globe
are “rapidly approaching a point where subsidies are becoming less needed and
less relevant,” and solar development is beginning to make economic sense on its
own, Zindler explained. Solar plants also give countries a sense of financial
energy security, as they know what they will be paying for electricity
production over the next 10 to 20 years – due to set tariff rates.
While
Zindler said that he and his team are not in the business of making policy
recommendations – just analyses – he did stress how important it is to most
countries to diversify their energy portfolios. He also noted that this year he
has seen a much more heterogeneous market in terms of geographic distribution of
energy sources.
“The demand is going to fall substantially in Germany and
has already in Italy,” Zindler said, of two of the countries employing solar
energy the most right now. “Essentially, you have an industry that has been
growing its production capacity but needs new markets to enter.”
As
Israel goes forward, Zindler said that the country is being wise in its policy
proposals with regards to its own feed-in tariff.
Rather than relying on
fixed values set to be implemented over time, the Israeli Public Utility
Authority will be determining its feed-in tariffs by pegging the tariff rates
against inflation, exchange rate and currency parameters, as well as by
employing the Bloomberg New Energy Finance index for solar equipment costs,
Zindler explained.
This method – regardless of whether the index used was
from his firm or another’s – will allow officials to be “very much in touch with
real world market conditions” and to integrate them seamlessly into a simple
formula, he said.
Following such meticulous, real-time updated trends
will allow Israel to avoid being too generous with their rates and thereby avoid
financial crises in the industry that Germany, Italy and Spain have experienced,
he explained.
“There has been a history where have countries have
overpaid for solar,” Zindler said.
Meanwhile, the International Energy
Agency (IEA) has just launched the 2012 edition of its World Energy Outlook,
predicting a steady growth of renewable energy adoption but also noting a
continued heavy reliance on fossil fuels.
Looking at energy trends
globally through the year 2035, the report finds that there will, in fact, be a
pronounced shift away from oil, coal and in some cases nuclear power toward
natural gas and renewables. That being said, fossil fuels will still remain the
most prevalent source of energy internationally, with coal specifically
remaining “the leading global fuel for power generation,” according to the IEA
report.
While coal might remain dominant, the outlook suggests that
renewables will also “take their place in the sun,” and by 2035 should account
for almost onethird of total electricity output in the world. By 2015,
renewables should become the second-largest source of power generation – about
half of coal’s generation – and by 2035, they should “approach coals as the
primary source of global electricity,” according to the World Energy
Outlook.
“The rapid increase in renewable energy is underpinned by
falling technology costs, rising fossil-fuel prices and carbon pricing, but
mainly by continued subsidies,” the report’s executive summary
said.
“Subsidy measures to support new renewable energy projects need to
be adjusted over time as capacity increases and as the costs of renewable
technologies fall, to avoid excessive burdens on governments and consumers.”