Energy

U.S. Solar PV Market Continues to Expand

Solar rooftop installation
Source: Thinkstock
While solar photovoltaic (PV) panel and module makers continue to struggle with low prices, solar installations in the U.S. continue to rise, according to the latest data from GTM Research. In the first quarter of 2013, the U.S. installed 723 megawatts of solar PV generation, up 33% over the 544 megawatts installed in the first quarter of last year. Growth in the residential market totaled 53% year-over-year, while growth in the non-residential market fell by 20%. Utility scale projects were up 130% compared with a year ago.

California was again the number one state for new solar installations, with 408 megawatts installed in the first quarter, more than a third of the total installed in the state during all of 2012. Utility scale projects represented well over half of all first-quarter installations in the state.

The national average price for an installed system fell from $4.45/watt in the first quarter of 2012 to $3.37/watt in 2013. Prices for residential systems fell 15.8% year-over-year, from $5.86/watt to $4.93/watt. Sequentially, prices fell by 1.9%. Prices for non-residential systems fell 15.6% year-over-year and 8.1% sequentially. Utility-scale projects saw an year-over-year price decline of 26% and 6% sequentially.

Module prices fell from $0.94/watt in the first quarter of last year to $0.64/watt this year, while polysilicon prices declined from $31.62/kg to just $17.36/kg. It’s no wonder that silicon and module makers are having a tough time.

GTM Research expects all solar installations to total 4,400 megawatts in 2013, rising to nearly 9,200 megawatts by 2016. The largest opportunity for near-term growth has shifted to the residential market.

The research firm reported 6 megawatts/AC of concentrating solar capacity was installed in the first quarter. Two large projects totalling more than 500 megawatts/AC are scheduled for completion by the end of this year.

GTM Research notes that risks to their projections come from attempts by utility companies to revise, cap, or eliminate net metering; to change rate structures to make solar power more costly; and availability of financing.

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