Renewables

More solar companies in Germany cut jobs amid weakening rooftop demand

Published by

Despite a strong performance over the past two years, Germany’s solar sector is facing declining demand and a weakening market, leading to major cutbacks among photovoltaic companies. 

Berlin start-up Zolar and Swiss solar manufacturer Meyer Burger have both announced major job cuts due to waning business and shifts in strategy, according to media reports.

Zolar, which sells and installs installations to homeowners, plans to lay off some 200 employees – half of its personnel – due to falling demand for rooftop PV systems, Handelsblatt reported. Zolar CEO Jamie Heywood told Handelsblatt that after two boom years, 2024 is “pretty tough.”

The company aims to phase out its business of selling solar systems to homeowners and focus on services for local installers.

Production company Meyer Burger is likewise reducing the global number of its employees by some 200, from 1,050 to 850, including jobs in Germany, Tagesspiegel noted.

The company said it was streamlining its entire corporate structure, reducing personnel in Europe but planning to increase its presence in the U.S. Meyer Burger plans to maintain its cell production site in Saxony, however.

The downturn has already resulted in a number of plant closures and bankruptcies in the sector, reported Handelsblatt. The Berlin-based company Eigensonne filed for bankruptcy last December.

It was taken over by Amia Energy, which then also filed for bankruptcy in early May. Leipzig-based Envoltec, which specialises in the installation of solar plants, likewise went under earlier this year.

Similarly, PV company Enersol in Baden-Württemberg announced it would close its operations in October, saying it could no longer work profitably.

A number of factors are behind the downturn, said Handelsblatt. Demand for PV systems on private homes has fallen sharply as concerns over high electricity prices have gone down since the height of the energy crisis, but also due to higher interest rates and declining purchasing power.

For European manufacturers, falling prices for solar modules have made it difficult to compete against international rivals, especially Chinese modules.

This article was originally published on Clean Energy Wire. Republished here under a “Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 International Licence (CC BY 4.0)” . Read the original version here.

Share
Published by

Recent Posts

Energy Insiders Podcast: “I don’t know if we can adapt”

WMO’s climate and energy lead Roberta Boscolo on the latest climate report, the 1.55°C average…

31 January 2025

Queensland unveils strict new wind farm planning rules, with solar projects to follow

LNP introduces strict new planning rules for wind projects in state with lowest share of…

31 January 2025

Neighbours of giant wind project offered up to $100m in unique deal that could shape design

Near neighbours of one of the country's biggest wind projects are being given the opportunity…

31 January 2025

Farmers offered $300m in discount loans for solar, batteries, EVs, seaweed and windbreaks

Farmers offered up to $300 million of discount loans to help efforts to cut emissions,…

31 January 2025

Biggest vanadium flow battery in Australia promised for ailing Kalgoorlie grid

A 500 MWh vanadium flow battery - the biggest in Australia - has been promised…

30 January 2025

Big batteries cash in as they charge past gas to become second biggest player in evening peaks

Big batteries have overtaken gas as the second biggest player in the evening demand peaks,…

30 January 2025