TOKYO -- Solar panel prices have dropped by half over the past year amid a flood of supply from China that has led European manufacturers to shut down factories and seek support from policymakers.
Many of China's provinces are struggling to service their debts. Solar companies must also compete for government largesse with firms in other industries that are grappling with overcapacity as China's economy slows. More than a fifth of Chinese industrial firms were unprofitable last year, according to analysis by Rhodium, another consultancy.
Why is China able to produce more solar panels than the world?
China is now able to produce more than twice as many solar modules as the world installs each year. This massive expansion in supply has helped drive down the cost of renewable energy for consumers, acting as a counterweight to the rising cost of capital needed to develop solar farms.
How big is China's solar industry?
China's solar industry is dominant across every stage of the global supply chain, from the polysilicon to the finished product. Module production capacity in the country reached roughly 1,000 gigawatts (GW) last year, almost five times that of the rest of the world combined, according to Wood Mackenzie, a consultancy.
What's more, it may be politically fraught to shut down Chinese factories. Some of Runergy's biggest shareholders are government investment funds with ties to Yancheng, the city in Jiangsu province where it is based. That could make it difficult to extract the obvious benefits of consolidation.
Wood Mackenzie forecasts that China's solar industry will expand capacity to nearly 1,700 GW by 2026. State support for the industry is contributing to the supply glut. For decades leaders of municipal and provincial governments in China have sought to build local solar industries that hire from their populations and contribute taxes.
Should runergy be consolidated to solve China's solar problem?
Some of Runergy's biggest shareholders are government investment funds with ties to Yancheng, the city in Jiangsu province where it is based. That could make it difficult to extract the obvious benefits of consolidation. The debate on how to solve China's solar problem is heating up.