Design Article
PV industry looks to a bright future
Anne-Francoise Pele
10/1/2012 11:49 AM EDT
PARIS - Photovoltaics will continue to be a fast growing industry, according to the European Commission’s Joint Research Center (JRC).
In its newly published report, 2012 Photovoltaics Status Report, JRC indicated that the PV industry production rose by almost 40 percent in 2011, reaching a worldwide production volume of about 35 GWp of PV modules.
Last year, worldwide new investments into the renewable energy and energy efficiency sectors represented $263 billion, including $25.8 billion R&D spending. For the second year in a row, solar power attracted the largest amount of new investments into renewable energies and increased by 44 percent to $128 billion.
Compiling investment analysts and industry prognoses, JRC said solar energy will continue to grow at high rates in the coming years. The different Photovoltaic Industry Associations, as well as Greenpeace, the European Renewable Energy Council (EREC) and the International Energy Agency, have developed new scenarios for the future growth of PV.

Table 1: Evolution of the cumulative solar electrical capacities until 2050
These projections, JRC explained, demonstrate that "there are huge opportunities for PV in the future, if the right policy measures are taken". Indeed, such a development will not happen by itself. It will require the constant effort and support of all stakeholders to implement the envisaged change to a sustainable energy supply with PV delivering a major part, JRC concluded.
See related links:
Imec, Solvay claim record efficiency for OPV modules
IMEC, SolarWorld demo ultrathin PV module
Solar electricity: A renewable energy source
Increasing energy yield of PV panels
Anti-aging elixir for solar cells
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If you found this article to be of interest, visit SmartEnergy Designline where you will find the latest and greatest design, technology, product, and news articles with regard to all aspects of clean technologies. And, to register to our weekly newsletter, click here.
In its newly published report, 2012 Photovoltaics Status Report, JRC indicated that the PV industry production rose by almost 40 percent in 2011, reaching a worldwide production volume of about 35 GWp of PV modules.
Last year, worldwide new investments into the renewable energy and energy efficiency sectors represented $263 billion, including $25.8 billion R&D spending. For the second year in a row, solar power attracted the largest amount of new investments into renewable energies and increased by 44 percent to $128 billion.
Compiling investment analysts and industry prognoses, JRC said solar energy will continue to grow at high rates in the coming years. The different Photovoltaic Industry Associations, as well as Greenpeace, the European Renewable Energy Council (EREC) and the International Energy Agency, have developed new scenarios for the future growth of PV.

Table 1: Evolution of the cumulative solar electrical capacities until 2050
It presents the various scenarios of the Greenpeace/EREC study, as well as the different 2011 IEA World Energy Outlook scenarios and the IEA PV Technology Roadmap.
These projections, JRC explained, demonstrate that "there are huge opportunities for PV in the future, if the right policy measures are taken". Indeed, such a development will not happen by itself. It will require the constant effort and support of all stakeholders to implement the envisaged change to a sustainable energy supply with PV delivering a major part, JRC concluded.
See related links:
Imec, Solvay claim record efficiency for OPV modules
IMEC, SolarWorld demo ultrathin PV module
Solar electricity: A renewable energy source
Increasing energy yield of PV panels
Anti-aging elixir for solar cells
------------------------
If you found this article to be of interest, visit SmartEnergy Designline where you will find the latest and greatest design, technology, product, and news articles with regard to all aspects of clean technologies. And, to register to our weekly newsletter, click here.
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anne-francoise.pele
10/1/2012 5:35 PM EDT
JRC's full report, PV Status Report 2012, is available here: http://re.jrc.ec.europa.eu/refsys/pdf/PV%20reports/PVReport-2012-Part1.pdf
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PVinsights.com
10/1/2012 9:54 PM EDT
Accoding to PVinsights, http://pvinsights.com/indexUS.php , soar panel prices have been droppingover 80% since 4Q12. Lw panel price made solar enegy more affordable.
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Andrzej11
10/2/2012 12:46 PM EDT
Since we haven't hit the 4th quarter yet, how can prices have fallen 80 percent since then?
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