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Ontario solar installations to surpass 600 MW in 2012: iSuppi

Ontario’s solar market is boomin’ baby.

California-based market research firm iSuppli came out with a report today that forecasts rapid growth of solar PV installations in Ontario, though warns of a bottleneck in production during the first half of 2011 as developers struggle to meet stricter local content requirements. In 2009 Ontari0 had 69 MW of installed PV, but iSuppli said that will grow by 272.5 per cent to 257 MW in 2010. Stricter rules requiring 60 per cent local content will kick in next year, however, and that will create a supply crunch that slows down growth until the last quarter of 2011 when local manufacturing catches up with demand. As a result, we’ll see growth of 75.5 per cent in 2011 as installations climb to 451 MW. In 2012 we’ll see that number climb past 600 MW.

Mike Sheppard, a PV analyst with iSuppli and author of the report, says companies that have set up local manufacturing in Ontario will benefit the most during the 2011 crunch. According to an iSuppli press brief, “Firms like Canadian Solar, SMA, Fronius and Silfab are stepping in to meet the demand for local solar components, building module and inverter manufacturing facilities in Ontario.”

Sheppard acknowledged that Ontario’s decision to shut down all coal plants by 2014 and its introduction of a Green Energy Act and feed-in-tariff program are driving the explosive growth in PV. He called Ontario’s FIT program “North America’s first comprehensive guaranteed pricing structure for electricity production from renewable fuels sources including solar PV, bio-energy waterpower and wind.” The program, according to iSuppli, “could have a major influence throughout North America.”

This is a positive evaluation, but I don’t think it’s as positive as it could be. As I outlined earlier, module manufacturers alone are setting up local production facilities with a combined annual capacity of more than 1,000 MW. Not all will be built, but iSuppli seems to think that actual installations will be limited to between 150 and 200 MW a year. If that ends up the case, we could end up having some major oversupply issues in Ontario by the end of 2011. But given the huge volume of FIT applications being received by the Ontario Power Authority and amounting to potentially several thousand megawatts, I’m wondering if iSuppli is low-balling its forecast.

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Tags: feed-in tariff, Green Energy Act, iSuppli, ontario

This entry was posted on Thursday, August 26th, 2010 at 9:27 am and is filed under ontario, solar. You can follow any responses to this entry through the RSS 2.0 feed. Both comments and pings are currently closed.

One Response to “Ontario solar installations to surpass 600 MW in 2012: iSuppi”

  1. J.Diamond Says:
    August 30th, 2010 at 5:39 pm

    Great article, but not so great news re the bottle neck.

    I believe we will hear a lot more about new companies and new technologies who comply with local content requirements as manufacturers get closer to finalizing their manufacturing process. For example, I heard of a new utility scale inverter design which was tested and CSA approved only last week, with a fully functioning manufacturing facility in Richmond Hill. They haven’t really marketed themselves too much, due to wanting to wait until the new product was tested and certified.

    Speaking of inverters, are you familiar with the problems Local Distribution Companies are now posing re potentially blocking energy from local solar projects, as a result of harmonic issues in some inverter systems
    - I could see this seriously adding to the already existing bottleneck.

    JD.

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