Mixed Greens: Jinko sees solar parity in Australia

Published by

China-based solar manufacturer JinkoSolar Holding has announced the addition of a Queensland-based Australian subsidiary – JinkoSolar Australia – with the opening of a new office, located halfway between Brisbane and the Gold Coast, that will house around 4-5MW of solar PV modules for sale and delivery to JinkoSolar’s local partners and help boost the company’s Australian market.

Jinko chairman David Li said that “now more than ever is the most strategic time for JinkoSolar to stake its hold in Australia’s market,” which he described as “highly oriented towards renewable energy.” And he may be right, with some forecasts suggesting that Australia could add 10GW of solar PV by the end of the decade, and, as Li suggests, “grid parity for the residential market in states such as New South Wales” coming within reach.

But we were a bit bemused by this added reason for Jinko’s move, Australia’s apparent “adoption” of the ’ Zero Carbon Australia 2020 Stationary Energy Plan’. The development of the aspirational report by Beyond Zero Emissions has been a welcome addition to Australia’s carbon and energy policy debate, but as far as we know BZE chief  Matthew Wright is not yet the Minister for Energy.

Infigen’s revenue swings

Australia’s largest listed renewables group, Infigen Energy, has released its first half production and revenue estimates, reporting a 7 per cent rise in revenue from Australian operations for the corresponding period, but a small drop in revenue in the US, and drops in production levels in both the US and Australia. The wind power-driven business said that it expects to report evenue of $125.7 million from its Australian and US businesses, down from $126.4 million for the six months ended 31 December 2010.

Infigen attributes the hits to production – down 7 per cent in the US, and 1 per cent in Australia – to unfavourable wind conditions, adverse foreign exchange movements and, in Australia, network constraints at the Lake Bonney 2&3 wind farms in South Australia. The increase to revenue in Australia – $A63.9 million, up from $A59.9 million in H1 FY11 – is attributed to improved wholesale electricity and large-scale generation certificates (LGC) prices and the initial contribution from the Woodlawn Wind Farm, partially offset by lower production. The company says that at 31 December 2011, it held approximately 204,000 unsold LGCs. Unsold LGCs contributed $A8.5 million to the Australian revenue during the period.

Canberra launches $1bn cleantech fund

The Gillard government on Thursday launched its Clean Technology Investment Programs, which will provide $1 billion in funding for manufacturers to improve energy efficiency and reduce pollution. The two competitive grants-based programs – the $800 million Clean Technology Investment Program and the $200 million Clean Technology Food and Foundries Investment Program – are part of the government’s Clean Energy Future package and are aimed at helping manufacturers invest in new plants and equipment to cut their energy costs and/or reduce carbon pollution, such as switching to less carbon intensive energy sources or installing new manufacturing equipment, processes and facilities to reduce energy consumption and carbon emissions.

Climate and Industry and Innovation Minister, Greg Combet, also announced that the government would change co-contribution requirements to make the grant programs more attractive for small and medium-sized firms. Manufacturers with turnovers of less than $100 million requesting funding under $500,000 will now only have to match the government grants on a dollar for dollar basis. For all other grants under $10 million, applicants will be required to contribute $2 for every $1 from the government. For grants of $10 million or more, applicants will be expected to make a co-contribution of at least $3 for each $1 of support.

Sophie Vorrath

Sophie is editor of Renew Economy and editor of its sister site, One Step Off The Grid . She is the co-host of the Solar Insiders Podcast. Sophie has been writing about clean energy for more than a decade.

Share
Published by

Recent Posts

Graph of the Day: Batteries overtake gas in morning peaks in Australia’s most advanced renewable grid

Batteries are delivering higher peak morning supply than gas. Gas is still twice as large…

15 March 2026

How does Australia compare on wind turbine density? The answer might surprise you

How does Australia compare to the rest of the world on the number wind turbines…

15 March 2026

Why an oil crisis is bad news for Australia’s biggest coal state – and how to break the cycle

One state in Australia remains particularly vulnerable to global oil shocks because it hasn't built…

13 March 2026

Energy Insiders Podcast: How the world’s fourth biggest economy plans to reach 100 pct clean energy

David Hochschild, the head of the California Energy Commission, on how the world's fourth biggest…

13 March 2026

When will the energy sector understand the National Energy Objective? When will governments enforce its intent?

Fifty years of cheap gas and electricity and intensive marketing have distorted perceptions. Every element…

13 March 2026

“It is paramount:” AEMO says system and market operator functions must be kept together

Australian Energy Market Operator says its system and market operation functions should not be separated…

13 March 2026