Graph of the Day: Global solar PV demand by country

Published by

This graph, from a recent presentation from Canadian Solar, the world’s third biggest solar PV module manufacturer, gives a fascinating insight into the changing shape of global demand for solar – not just it’s massive growth, but also its geographical shift.

In 2011, for instance, Italy was the largest market for solar PV in the world, followed by Germany. Together they accounted for more than 60 per cent of global demand, thanks to their favourable feed in tariffs at the tim.

The next year, demand from the world’s three biggest economies awoke. In 2014, China, Japan, and the US will be the world’s three biggest markets, showing compound growth rates since 2009 of between 69 per cent and 165 per cent in the case of China.

Demand in both China and Japan is being supported by feed-in-tariffs, and the rate in China is expected to increase to ensure that demand is met. In Japan, the FiT has been set at 36 yen ($US0.38)/kWh, while in the US solar is supported by tax credits, net metering, and power purchase agreements set by an auctioning process for large utility-scale projects.

 

solar

 

Giles Parkinson

Giles Parkinson is founder and editor of Renew Economy, and of its sister sites One Step Off The Grid and the EV-focused The Driven. He is the co-host of the weekly Energy Insiders Podcast. Giles has been a journalist for more than 40 years and is a former deputy editor of the Australian Financial Review. You can find him on LinkedIn and on Twitter.

Share
Published by

Recent Posts

Australia’s moment: How Trump’s fossil turn can supercharge our energy revolution

The transition to renewable energy and clean transport is a gold rush – and with…

24 January 2025

Old king coal risks leaving Australia “in the dark” as aging power plants grow unreliable

New research reveals more than 60% of Australia’s remaining coal power fleet is more than…

23 January 2025

AEMC answers state’s call to use mothballed diesel plants for emergency summer back-up

A temporary energy market rule change will allow two mothballed diesel generators to be used…

23 January 2025

The devil of Frontier’s nuclear modelling is not in the detail, it’s in the omissions

Frontier's nuclear modelling poses a valuable question about the pace of decarbonisation and what we…

23 January 2025

New records for solar and coal underscore urgent energy challenge facing NSW

Australia's biggest coal state continues to reach new solar heights, but a different sort of…

23 January 2025

Transgrid locks in supplier of high-voltage transmission kit for HumeLink project

Transgrid has selected the supplier of more key components of its massive HumeLink project, the…

23 January 2025