Canadian Solar to Buy Four Solar Projects for $37 Million

Solar PV manufacturers continue expanding into project development – an understandable move provided that manufacturers can obtain cheaper financing for their projects.

Canadian Solar completed the purchase of two projects, capable of generating about 24 MW, and is buying two other Ontario solar power plants with a capacity of about 22.5 megawatts, according to a statement from the Guelph, Ontario based-company today.

The company may own more projects in the future, instead of just selling panels and developing facilities, Canadian Solar Chief Financial Officer Michael Potter said in a Dec. 10 interview. All projects are expected to operate under Ontario FIT program.

More details here.

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The Commercial Promise Of 1,000 V DC PV Design

 

Re-post of the interesting article written by Jim Morgenson from SMA and distributed via email.

The U.S. commercial PV market is primed for significant growth. According to GTM Research and the Solar Energy Industries Association, the segment is expected to see a 25% annual compound growth rate from 2011 to 2016, clearly indicating the market’s potential.

While much of the growth has been attributed to plunging module prices, a new focus on inverter technology and design innovation in balance-of-system (BOS) components promises to drive the generated cost of solar electricity even lower.

BOS pricing can be relatively inflexible due to raw material costs. However, there is room for savings through new technologies and system design optimization. One such innovation, which is already applied as a standard best practice in the European commercial segment and utility projects around the world, has recently entered the North American commercial market: 1,000 V DC design.

Utilizing 1,000 V DC input design and technology allows integrators to realize increased energy production, material cost savings and a lower levelized cost of energy.

The barriers to domestic adoption of 1,000 V DC designs have ranged from a lack of high-quality UL listed products, legacy designs at 600 V DC and reluctant inspector acceptance.

Recently, however, the tide has changed, and these barriers have been removed by a growing number of high-quality UL-listed modules, BOS components and inverters driven mainly by the utility segment, along with a greater awareness among inspectors that provisions exist in the current code to support 1,000 V DC for commercial applications.

Clear financial benefits

The case for commercial 1,000 V DC adoption is clear. With higher voltages, integrators benefit from lower installed costs, greater inverter efficiency, less system power loss and a reduced number of BOS components.

For comparison, consider the following benchmark between a traditional 600 V DC system and a 1,000 V DC system:

e_Focus_Chart_1.jpg

Due to greater DC input and longer DC strings, the reference system achieves significant savings, particularly attributed to reduced wiring need. The following graph illustrates these savings:

e_Focus_Chart_2.jpg

By saving more than 19,000 feet of 10 AWG wire and 2,000 feet of MCM wire and cabling, the 1,000 V DC system saved more than $20,000 on wiring costs alone, not including conduit or labor savings. When all factors are considered, a $0.02/W to $0.03/W savings can be achieved at installation.

Improved performance

Systems can achieve additional savings through better performance. Reduced line losses and higher inverter efficiency improve energy production, reducing the system’s cost-per-megawatt hour.

Following the principle that higher voltages will experience less resistance, a 1,000 V DC system will perform better than a 600 V DC system. Comparing line losses through a voltage drop calculator showed the following for the same 750 kW AC example:

e_Focus_Chart_3.jpg

With an approximate 0.5% efficiency gain due to lower line loss, total energy harvest is improved.

The same principle applies within the inverter. Higher voltage means less internal resistance. The current CEC efficiency record is 98.5%, held by the SMA Sunny Central 800 CP-US inverter – a 1,000 V DC machine.

In comparison, the efficiencies of most 600 V DC inverters will be 0.5% to 1% lower. Designers work very hard to find efficiency gain because they know it translates directly into a more profitable project.

Long-term financial advantage

How much is a 1% gain worth to a project this size? We compared five sites across the U.S., using PVsyst, a PC software package for the study, sizing, simulation and data analysis of complete PV systems.

Using the program’s default values, PVsyst showed that the 1% gain could be worth more than $40,000 over 20 years at $0.12/kWh. Columbus, Ohio – the “least valuable” of the five sites – showed a value of $28,000 while Tucson, Ariz., came in at more than $40,000.

With approximately 40% BOS wiring savings and up to 2% efficiency improvement, the economic value can top $100,000 per MW/DC ($0.10/W). This is exactly why 1,000 V DC systems have been the preferred standard in Europe for several years.

This technology and design standard has ability to appreciably drive price down and value up in North America. With code, inspector and equipment supply issues resolved, the future of 1,000 V DC domestic commercial PV is extremely promising.

For more information on leading 1,000 V DC system design, visit the SMA Sunny Central CP-US Application Guide.
Jim Morgenson is director of business development for power plant solutions at SMA America. For more information, please contact sales@SMA-America.com.

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PV 2012: Strong finish expected

2012 has been a rough year for the solar industry around the globe, having been consumed by anti-dumping and protectionist measures as countries across the world tried to rescue their own manufacturers in the face of massive oversupply and ever-falling prices. However, the year could have been far worse.

As of now we may reasonably expect installation of the following solar PV generation capacities by country:

Germany  8GW
Italy 3.5GW
France 3.5GW
China 5GW
Japan 2GW

Unfortunately Canada (Ontario) is barely visible on such background.

Read more at pv-magazine.

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Canadian Solar Receives C$139 Million Non-Recourse Construction Financing Agreement

Canadian Solar announced that it has signed a financing agreement pursuant to which Deutsche Bank has agreed to provide C$139 million (US$139 million) in non-recourse, short-term construction financing to Canadian Solar for the construction of solar power projects in Ontario, Canada. The loans are expected to be repaid with the proceeds of the sale of the respective financed projects.

The loan facility is intended to support the simultaneous construction of five utility-scale solar power plants totaling 49 MW AC. Developed by Canadian Solar, the projects are expected to be built and connected through 2012 and 2013. All of the projects have been awarded a 20-year power purchase contract (the “FIT Contract”) by the Ontario Power Authority under the Ontario’s Feed- In-Tariff Program.

Read more at MarketWatch.

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Silfab and Heliene join forces in Ontario

Ontario-based solar PV manufacturer Heliene is to join forces with Italy’s Silfab in a manufacturing joint venture targeting the larger solar developers in Ontario, Canada, the companies have announced.

The new entity, Helios Power Canada, started commercial operation last week, and aims to serve the utility scale solar market as Ontario’s feed-in tariff FIT programme gathers pace over the next two years.

Read more at Renewable Energy Focus.

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PV Parity is close in several European countries

Grid Parity for residential and commercial consumers – the moment when electricity generated from solar photovoltaics is competitive against other sources – is in sight in many European countries, concludes the PV Parity project consortium. The European project has assessed the evolution of system prices, retail electricity prices, and cost of financing, as well as the capacity in various countries to self-consume photovoltaic electricity produced. The findings are decisive: Grid parity is imminent in several countries. The smooth transition to full grid parity will be essential to adapt support schemes properly in the coming years.

The consortium also has analysed the commercial/industrial and the utility scale segments. Detailed results of the simulation are available at the following link. http://www.pvparity.eu/results/.

Read full announcement at PV Parity: New Press Release.

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Emerging markets to grow to 12 GW p.a. by 2017

In its latest photovoltaic market report IHS predicts the shift towards emerging markets. It has forecast cumulative demand of around 30 GW to be delivered by the emerging markets over the next four years.

Analyzing the potential for photovoltaic market development in 40 countries, the report has found that annual demand could increase from 1.6 GW p.a. to up to 12 GW p.a. from the emerging markets by 2017. The forecast for 2013, set out in the report, is between 2.1 and 3.5 GW p.a., growing to between the extremely wide span of 2.9 to 12.2 GW p.a.
The IHS report specifies that Romania and Brazil are the “most appealing” emerging markets, followed by “tier 2″ markets Argentina, Ecuador, Turkey and Mexico. While the outlook for photovoltaic growth in these countries is good, IHS notes that there are risks in companies looking to expand into them.

Analyzing the potential for photovoltaic market development in 40 countries, the report has found that annual demand could increase from 1.6 GW p.a. to up to 12 GW p.a. from the emerging markets by 2017. The forecast for 2013, set out in the report, is between 2.1 and 3.5 GW p.a., growing to between the extremely wide span of 2.9 to 12.2 GW p.a.

The IHS report specifies that South Africa, Thailand, Chile, Romania and Brazil are the “most appealing” emerging markets, followed by “tier 2″ markets Argentina, Ecuador, Turkey and Mexico. While the outlook for photovoltaic growth in these countries is good, IHS notes that there are risks in companies looking to expand into them.

Read more at http://www.pv-magazine.com/news/details/beitrag/emerging-markets-to-grow-to-12-gw-pa-by-2017_100009359/#ixzz2DWbTtggo

via pv-magazine.

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