High-Efficiency Crystalline Silicon Modules Rise to $8.6 Billion in
2015
Location: Boston
Author: Carole
Jacques
Date: Thursday, September 22, 2011
Increasing competition, diminishing subsidies and falling costs for
silicon have put increasing pressure on manufacturers of crystalline
silicon (x-Si) cells and modules. These competitive pressures have
prompted many tier-1 players to develop higher efficiency solar panels,
using emerging technologies such as selective emitter, HIT
(heterojunction with intrinsic thin layer), or buried contact
technology, according to a new report from Lux Research.
“But the threat from low-cost Chinese manufacturers has forced such
players to keep increasing the efficiency of their panels just to
compete on cost – without earning a price premium.”
“Traditionally, x-Si cell and module producers such as SunPower and
Sanyo could command a higher price for more efficient panels,” said
Pallavi Madakasira, a Lux Analyst and lead author of the report. “But
the threat from low-cost Chinese manufacturers has forced such players
to keep increasing the efficiency of their panels just to compete on
cost – without earning a price premium.”
Commodity materials such as glass, aluminum and copper comprise the bulk
of a photovoltaic system, and the prices of these materials do not
significantly drop at higher volumes. Because higher efficiency panels
produce more power, they reduce the cost of these materials on a
per-watt ($/W) basis. Lux analysts found that a 1% improvement in
absolute efficiency contributes to $0.05 to $0.08 savings per peak watt.
Among the key industry dynamics, Lux Research expects, that will dictate
how higher efficiency products fare:
Economics move high-efficiency modules into utility uses. In the
residential and commercial sectors, it may be difficult to justify the
upfront cost for high-efficiency modules. In utility-size applications,
however, where more funds can be made available and where projects need
to be guaranteed for a long time, high-efficiency modules can work quite
well.
There is a new wave of innovation and R&D spending among equipment
suppliers. A push towards adoption and commercialization of
high-efficiency technologies has meant that equipment suppliers are
revisiting materials consumed and associated costs and technologies
pursued.
Research labs and universities are increasingly becoming the core
enablers to commercialization of new technologies. An increasing number
of tier 1 manufacturers are collaborating with research labs or hiring
away talent in an effort to bring proprietary technology know-how
in-house.

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