Australian solar market experiencing unprecedented downturn

Sunwiz

The Australian Solar industry has seen ups and downs, to the point of being described as a Solar Coaster. But now it is confronted by a protracted downturn, the likes of which it hasn’t seen before. To the point where 4 out of 5 months in 2015 have been lower than every month since January 2012. Indeed, May 2015 was the worst May for REC registration since 2010. Overall, volumes are 20% down on last year – 245MW has been registered in the first five months of the year, compared to 310MW the same time last year.

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Queensland and South Australia have been hardest hit. Queensland had registered 105MW of installations in the first five months of 2014; this year it sits at 80MW; SA registered 48MW over January-May 2014 but only has 27MW in the same period in 2015.

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The declining volume is creating immense pressure in the solar industry. Many of the installing electricians have pulled-back from solar, returning to sales of other electrical equipment, but the marketplace is still over-crowded. Intense competition has driven prices to unsustainable lows, making it difficult to make a profit. Meanwhile fat-walleted electricity retailers who will swallow years of loss-making solar business segments are looking to enter, command, and dominate the market.

Thankfully there are islands of opportunity – where there is commercial PV there is growth. The NSW market is growing because of its focus on commercial PV, even as the residential market there contracts. Queensland on the other hand has been over-reliant on residential PV and is now suffering because of it.

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The challenge faced by many is that commercial sales are far more difficult to close than residential sales. One of the main challenges with commercial is that businesses take a lot of time deciding to purchase PV, somany solar companies waste months courting and educating what turns out to be tyre-kickers. Making a profit in commercial PV necessitates a fresh approach, in which pipelines are filled with high quality leads, tyre-kickers are effortlessly filtered out and customer education is an automatic process, so that ample time is available for the customers most likely to buy. Profitable sales demand an innovative focus upon selling a meticulously-calculated financial outcome using best-practice sales materials, meanwhile delivering an excellent sales experience so that you can justify a price that’s higher than your competition. SunWiz’s ProfitVoltaics service electrifies commercial solar profitability, and is 100% necessary for survival.

Source: Sunwiz. Reproduced with permission.

Comments

3 responses to “Australian solar market experiencing unprecedented downturn”

  1. john Avatar
    john

    Queensland where if you spend $7k you can with a pretty good north facing array produce 8000 kwh of power So do the figures if you use only 20% of the production that is 8000 *20% = 1600 KwH @ 28c a Kwh = $448
    Ok export the rest 6400 @ .053 cents = $339
    So total return = $787 expend $7000 return = 11.24%
    Even taking away 7% as cost of capital this still leaves 4.24% as return on capital.
    This is a total no brainer.

    1. Mike Dill Avatar
      Mike Dill

      I am willing to bet that the export tariff will change shortly, greatly reducing your return. Spend an extra $4K and store some, and you can probably double your self-usage.

  2. Leigh Ryan Avatar
    Leigh Ryan

    Partly due no doubt to energy companies charging solar users more for their grid electricity, however the solar market can be re-captured if installers reduce their profit margins to the absolute minimum let’s say a 3 month special, if they really believe in their industry as they want us to they will fight back not throw their hands up in the air and blame everything and everyone else, go get em boys

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