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Record low PV prices endanger European manufacturing

A ‘perfect storm’ of market forces, not unusual in commodities, has driven prices down by more than 25%. Module prices have hit the record-low of less than 0.15 EUR/W for low-cost products, now even submerging pre-Covid levels, making it extremely difficult for European manufacturing companies to sell their products. The news comes soon after Norwegian Crystals, one of the continent’s enduring ingot manufacturers, filed for bankruptcy.

Also interesting: Modules are becoming cheaper and cheaper

The combination of strong global demand signals and fierce competition between Chinese suppliers, has led to significant rates of new investment in solar PV supply chains. The resulting oversupply has led to quickly dropping prices for raw materials like silicon, down the supply chain to modules, inverters, and batteries.

Solar Power Europe calling for decisive action

The current situation is exacerbated by a slight, temporary, slowing down of the European solar market in Q3, linked to inflation and tightening bottlenecks around grid connections and project permitting.

SolarPower Europe is urgently calling on the European Commision to take decisive action, such as:

- Swift emergency acquisition of European PV manufacturer’s module inventories. 

- Establishing a Solar Manufacturing Bank at EU level

- Address the inadequacies of the Temporary Transition and Crisis Framework (TCTF) for State Aid, in particular point 86 Accelerate the adoption of the Net Zero Industry Act, including strong sustainability and resilience criteria in specific auctions.

- Advance the intended impact of the EU Forced Labour Regulation by backing the Solar Stewardship Initiative (SSI).

- Enable collaboration between Member States support programs Balance oversupply with a further boost demand for solar PV in Europe e.g. through the European Performance of Building Directive.

Price drops not only good news – challenges for domestic competitiveness

Walburga Hemetsberger, CEO of SolarPower Europe: “While price drops are typically welcome news, if unchecked they have serious repercussions for our open strategic autonomy. In the short term, this is already posing real challenges to domestic competitiveness and the rebirth of EU solar manufacturing. We’re urgently calling on EU leaders to save Europe’s strategic tech supply lines.”

Did you miss that? Solar energy sector sees prices continue to fall

Hemetsberger continues, “This is a rare second chance. Europe’s original solar manufacturing base was lost a decade ago. If we don’t respond rapidly and appropriately to this price crisis, we’re looking at another wave of bankruptcies, and a false start for EU's open strategic autonomy agenda.” (hcn)