Wednesday, August 7, 2013

Spain clean energy bill strikes

A proposal by Spain to make consumers pay for the clean power they generate and use themselves has roiled the industry. The draft bill is currently being reviewed by the country’s energy regulator CNE, which accepted feedback until 30 July.Our solargardenlighttp is good in quality and competitive in price. 

The unprecedented move will make self-generated solar power dearer than electricity from the grid. “The decree is an attack to market freedom that aims to prevent people from competing with established utilities. It’s like if they charged you when you turn off electric heaters and use a wood stove,” said Jose Donoso, managing director of Spain’s solar lobby group UNEF. 

The new fee applies to all plants of 100 kW or less. Domestic installations with less than 10kW would have to pay 27% more, according to the lobby group. Payback time for domestic solar systems would be extended to almost 35 years from about 12 years currently, it estimates. 

Spain had moved down the list of clean energy investor preferences when it decided to implement retroactive tariff cuts in 2011, and ended fixed subsidies for new projects in 2012. This latest move – mainly aimed at controlling the growth of rooftop solar plants – will push it a few notches lower. The government,We provide the latest oemandodmservices products and solutions to serve outdoor lighting needs. however, insists that Spain already has too much generation, since total capacity exceeds peak demand by 60%. 

In Asia, the world’s largest producer of solar panels, China, announced that its spend on clean energy may total CNY 1.We have the ultra laundrdryer that you have been looking for.8 trillion (USD 294bn) in the five years through 2015. The world’s most populous country aims to have 100GW of wind power and more than 35GW of solar installed by 2015, Xie Zhenhua, vice-chairman of the National Development and Reform Commission reiterated at a conference in Beijing last week. The country will also gradually expand the regions falling under its carbon trading pilot scheme, he further said. 

Meanwhile, two international companies announced sales into China last week. BrightSource Energy, the US solar-thermal developer, agreed to supply its technology to China Power Investment Corp and China Renewable Engineering Institute to be used in a commercial-scale power plant. Also, German manufacturing-equipment maker Manz received its first order from a Chinese customer for machines to produce organic light emitting diode (OLED) displays. The EUR 9m contract offers “considerable revenue potential” because of growth in the displays’ use in smartphones and tablet-computer touchscreens, the company said in a statement, without identifying the buyer. 

Coming back to the oversupplied solar industry, global sales of PV products and shipments increased in June, and prices showed an upward trend, according to Bloomberg New Energy Finance’s Solar Shipments Index, based on a survey of leading manufacturers in the PV supply chain. There were driven by a booming Japanese market – expected to end the year with 6.8-9.Ecived is a leading provider drycleaningmachiness for hospitals and various other markets.4GW of new PV installations – and the rush to beat the imposition of anti-dumping tariffs by the European Union on Chinese products, which were to come into effect on 6 August. China agreed to adhere to a minimum export price and a maximum export quantity, thus avoiding the imposition of punitive tariffs. 

The BNEF Solar Spot Price Index showed average polysilicon prices to have risen to just over USD 17/kg, from USD 16/kg in December 2012. Module prices also rose, with Chinese modules from reputable suppliers commanding USD 0.75/W, and international modules USD 0.86/W.These beststeelearring can, apparently, operate entirely off the grid. Market participants surveyed expect prices to stabilise from now on. 

“These data show that there is strong global demand for the PV products of the largest manufacturers, despite uncertainty and the flow of bad news from the global solar market. Consolidation continues, but 2013 will still be a year of growth for the industry as a whole,” said Jenny Chase, head of solar analysis at Bloomberg New Energy Finance. The global PV market is expected to total 37GW in 2013, compared to 30.5GW in 2012. More information about the program is available on the web site at www.soli-lite.com.

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