Suniva, Heliene team up to make US domestic content solar modules
Mar 28, 2024 8:30 CESTPower plant developers plan to install 17.8 GW of utility-scale solar photovoltaic (PV) generating capacity in 2022, according to the US Energy Information Administration’s (EIA) June 2022 Preliminary Monthly Electric Generator Inventory. Over the first six months of 2022, 4.2 GW of that capacity came online, less than half of what the industry had planned to install in those months. From January through June 2022, about 20% of planned solar photovoltaic capacity was delayed.
Data source: U.S. Energy Information Administration, Preliminary Monthly Electric Generator Inventory
EIA’s preliminary data from January through June 2022 show that PV solar installations were delayed by an average of 4.4 GW each month, compared with average monthly delays of 2.6 GW during the same period last year. In most cases, reported delays are for six months or less.
Various factors could cause delays, including broad economic factors, such as supply chain constraints, labour shortages, and high prices of components, and factors specific to electric generator projects, such as obtaining permits or testing equipment.
In February, the United States extended tariffs on imported crystalline silicon solar products from China, which raised the tariff-rate quota from 2.5 GW to 5 GW and excluded bifacial panels from the extension of duties. In April, the US Department of Commerce announced an anti-dumping circumvention investigation of solar cells and modules imported from Cambodia, Malaysia, Thailand, and Vietnam, countries that allegedly use parts made in China that otherwise would be subject to tariffs.
In June, the President took executive action to advance the deployment of solar in the United States. He authorised the easing of import duties for a 24-month period for solar cells and modules imported from the countries under investigation and invoked the Defense Production Act to expand domestic production of solar modules. Any determination that the Department of Commerce reaches in its investigation will apply after this 24-month period ends.
In EIA’s monthly survey, EIA asks respondents who plan to bring generators online in the near future which stage their projects are in: testing, construction, permitting, or planning. Most of the projects that will come online in the next 18 months are under construction. About 1.9 GW of solar capacity installations are projects under construction that have been delayed but are still scheduled to come online in 2022; another 1.7 GW under construction have been delayed to 2023.
Data source: U.S. Energy Information Administration, Preliminary Monthly Electric Generator Inventory
Principal contributors: Katherine Antonio, Tyler Hodge
Suniva, Heliene team up to make US domestic content solar modules
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