Germany: solar+storage outsells electric vehicles in 2015

Tesla

PV Magazine

 

Tesla
Tesla

The number of new stationary battery systems connected to solar arrays on German homes and businesses in 2015 far outnumber the number of electric vehicles that rolled onto roads. A new study has revealed the result demonstrating that despite the German government’s official target of one million new electric cars by 2020, solar+storage is gaining significant traction in the market.

The uptake of solar+storage in Germany has in some way compensated for the precipitous decline in PV systems being installed in 2015. Figures from the RWTH Aachen University published today has 12,363 electric cars were sold in Germany in 2015, at least 20,000 privately owned stationary storage systems were installed alongside PV arrays.

RWTH Aachen carried out an evaluation of the stationary storage subsidies for the German Federal Ministry of Economics.

The figures reveal that despite the German government’s rhetoric and lofty goals in terms of electric cars and e-mobility, that they are only slowly gaining traction in the market.

By contrast, the support scheme for solar+storage has surged ahead, resulting in the government announcing towards the end of 2015 that its battery support program had reached its goal and would no longer be continued.



In November, the government backtracked on this, saying that a new iteration of the storage subsidy would be put in place for 2016. The German solar and battery storage industries are currently waiting for details to be released.

The RWTH Aachen researchers conclude that given the success of the previous storage program that it should be continued, albeit in an amended form.

RWTH Aachen concluded that about half of the storage systems installed in Germany in 2015 benefited from the financing under the government support scheme.

Source: PV Magazine. Reproduced with permission.

Comments

3 responses to “Germany: solar+storage outsells electric vehicles in 2015”

  1. Charles Avatar
    Charles

    Not really surprising. A home battery system is about 20% of the cost of an EV!

  2. Malcolm Scott Avatar
    Malcolm Scott

    The article is a little mischievous. There were also another 10,000 plus PHEVs to be added to the list of BEVs. These PHEVs will have a battery on average of about 10 kWh. They are significant in any storage discussion, especially compared with the typical size range of grid connected home storage solutions.

    The author is being a purist and ignoring the benefit to the planet of the other group of plug-in electric vehicles.

    EV sales in Germany to end of November was 20,948, including Tesla Model S sales. So, 24,000 EV sales might have been achieved for the year.

  3. neroden Avatar
    neroden

    Oh, the dynamics of this are obvious:

    — countries with *cheap* grid electricity buy electric cars first, and buy solar panels later
    — countries with *expensive* grid electricity buy solar panels first, and buy electric cars later

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