Current weakness in the utility-scale market, however, will be
offset by larger volumes of projects than had been expected over
the next five years because solar energy is now cheaper than
ever, the report said.
Quarterly installations of utility-scale solar were 678
megawatts, the lowest quarter since 2015 and a more than 30
percent decline from a year ago, the report by Wood Mackenzie
for the U.S. Solar Energy Industries Association said. The total
market, which includes residential and commercial installations,
came in at 1.7 gigawatts.
The slowdown is a shift for solar, which has experienced runaway
gains in the last decade. Through the first three quarters of
the year, solar accounted for 30 percent of electricity
generating capacity additions.
Large solar projects for utilities are the most vulnerable to
the 30 percent tariffs as panels can account for up to half
their costs.
Trump announced the levy on all imported solar panels in
January, his opening salvo in a trade war aimed at helping U.S.
manufacturers rebound from years of decline. Solar installers
opposed the move because they rely on cheap imported panels to
compete with fossil fuels.
Most of the panels installed in the United States are made in
Asia by companies including China's JinkoSolar Holding Co Ltd,
Canadian Solar Inc, and U.S.-based SunPower Corp.
Wood Mackenzie lowered its 2018 utility-scale forecast to 6.6 GW
from 6.8 GW as more projects get pushed into 2019.
The firm raised its forecasts for 2019 through 2023 by a
combined 2.5 GW, however, as utilities procure projects that
will qualify for a federal tax credit that begins to phase out
in 2020. Developers will start projects next year but delay
buying modules until 2020 or later because the tariff drops by 5
percent each year.
Sliding solar panel prices are also spurring demand from
utilities.
A move by China earlier this year to slash subsidies for solar
installations has unleashed a flood of low-cost Chinese-made
panels onto the global market - pushing down prices.
Solar energy system prices are at historical lows in all
segments of the market, the report said. U.S. module prices are
down more than 15 percent from a year ago.
(Reporting by Nichola Groom; Editing by Lisa Shumaker)
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