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France and Germany Solar Subsidy Cuts signal lower feed-in tariffs for rooftop solar and photovoltaic power, tempering subsidies, grid payouts, and consumer costs while pressuring panel prices and curbing speculative capacity growth.
Context and Background
France and Germany plan solar feed-in tariff cuts to curb subsidies, cut costs, and push photovoltaic prices lower.
- France lowers rooftop solar rate to $0.61/kWh from $0.80.
- Berlin weighing 25% feed-in tariff cuts amid surge.
- 3,000 MW installed in 2009 vs 682 MW forecast.
- Taxpayers funded over $15B for solar in 2009.
France slashed subsidies for solar power by 24 percent, with Germany expected to announce cuts soon, as both governments aim to deter massive speculation by the industry.
The French Energy Ministry said electricity from rooftop solar panels will now be fed into the grid for $0.61 per kilowatt hour, down from the $0.80 rate set in 2006.
Germany is also expected to announce further subsidy cuts in the sector. A top official from the German Environment Ministry was meeting with representatives from the solar industry to discuss the way forward.
Both countries react to what experts have called "energy speculation."
The building of generation capacity - whether it is rooftop panels or larger plants - has exploded recently amid a solar power boost across Germany.
Tens of thousands of people have filed applications to install panels in France in November and December to profit from the generous subsidies.
In Germany, several solar power companies have plans to erect large-scale solar panel fields across the country to cash in on money from the country's renewable feed-in-tariff program. Q-Cells, the world's largest photovoltaic cell producer, founded a company for that sole purpose.
Meanwhile, it surfaced that the lobbyists of the German solar industry have downplayed growth rates in a bid to prevent Berlin from cutting subsidies, even as a German minister favours slashing tariffs.
German news magazine Der Spiegel reports that more than 3,000 MW worth of solar panels were installed in 2009, more than four times the amount initially planned by the industry.
The industry said 682 MW were planned, but later had to admit that the actual growth rate was around 3,000 MW, Der Spiegel writes. This is costing consumers dearly: In 2009 German taxpayers funded electricity produced from solar panels with more than $15 billion.
There are talks that Berlin will implement tariff cuts of around 25 percent, but the Germans will nevertheless have to pay billions more each year if growth in the industry continues.
The solar industry expects generation capacity growth rates of up to 700 MW per year until 2013 — and with installed PV capacity reaching 10,000 MW nationally, the current one seems grossly underestimated.
Experts hope that a drop in subsidies will put pressure on companies to reduce prices for their solar panels, meaning that the market share could further grow. Power from the sun accounts for only 1 percent of Germany's energy mix.
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