Solar Power International 2008 Wrap Up
October 21st, 2008by Preston Roper, EVP Corporate Development & Operations, Tioga Energy
General Comments:
- Huge attendance growth, doubling to 20,000 visitors from 2007, coupled with extreme segment optimism
- High optimism is not yet tempered to the financial/credit crisis and looming, global economic distress
- Great parties, with more free food and drink than one could wish for in the fabulous waterfront San Diego setting, which is about as good as one can imagine for a trade show (comfortable hall, great hotel and food access, perfect weather…)
2008 Takeaways:
- Average commercial PV project sizes continue upward – many, many 1-3MW projects in addition to the sub-megawatts (not to mention small utility and utility scale PV growth)
- New products announced last year to great fanfare are close to delivery and/or in low-volume production stages now – think micro-inverters, new CSP, thin film (e.g. CIGS) beyond the existing big names
- Big upstream players (cells/modules) are reaching further downstream, some testing the waters (sorry, it’s all NDA), some diving in head first (e.g. Suntech)
- Module supply is loosening, but still questionable versus growing demand. Spot pricing may show much higher volatility than past
- This year, not a single person visiting our both – and we had a lot of visitors — asked “what’s a PPA?” High market acceptance
- The Germans are coming!!
- The suits are here
- Double Decker booths are in! (…to have Sharp’s marketing budget….that’s the life)
Looking Forward
- In many Europeans’ eyes, we are a fledgling industry, ripe for cost reduction, standardization (product, incentives, process, etc.) and large-scale deployment rolled out six-sigma style. It’s going to be interesting.
- The big supply constraint for 2009 C&I PV may be financing. Caveat Emptor.
- The utilities are on the way…think of the deafening, equipment sucking sound otherwise known as Spain…are the utilities, utilizing the ITC, to become the “Spain” of North America?
- Fancy trackers, intricate CSP devices…do we really need all that complicated stuff to make cheap electrons?
- The Germans are coming (did I already say that?). The Spaniards are sitting across the aisle in first class, enjoying the exchange rate.
Great show, great week, huge opportunities.
Preston
