CleanTech Bites

Yingli says it targets 10% of Australia solar market

Published by

Yingli Green Energy, the world’s largest solar manufacturing company, says it aims to grab a 10 per cent share of the Australian solar market within two years as it concentrates on the commercial and utility-scale sector.

The Chinese-based company on Thursday announced the formal opening of its offices in Australia, as well as a distribution agreement with L&H Group, the largest electrical wholesaler in Australian and New Zealand.

Yingli Solar has had only a small presence in the Australian market, and commercial director Daman Cole says its focus will not be on the residential sector, which has provided nearly all the 2.5GW of solar PV installed to date, but which Yingli sees as a crowded and over-serviced market.

Instead, Cole says the company will focus on the commercial market – where he expects businesses to install solar arrays from the 30kW to 1MW size.

“in the commercial market we see a big opportunity that we can realize by 2015,” Cole told RenewEconomy. “He cited the need for solar to address ay-time peaks, and rising electricity and network costs.

“Solar and grid parity is going to be a much stronger argument for commercial users,” he said.”Solar is not the only answer to rising costs of grid electricity, but it will be one of the mechanisms that allows businesses to reduce their reliance on the grid.

He said battery storage was obviously the next major development and was “part of every manufacturers future”.

Cole says Yingli also expects the utility-scale market in Australia to pick up, as well as off-grid solutions. Yingli has products ranging from 6 watts to 600kW.

Yingli vice president Judy Tzeng Lee says Australia was one of a number of countries that would provide the most growth in the market – along with South Africa, India and other parts of Asia.

“We hope to get to 10 per cent (market share in Australia( by 2015,” she said, adding that emerging markets – beyond Europe, north America, China and Japan – would soon contribute more than 20 per cent of Yingli’s global sales. Yingli’s annual manufacturing capacity currently stands at 2.45GW – around the total capacity installed in Australia.

Yingli’s agreement with L&H Solar + Solutions will result in the distribution Yingli Solar’s flagship PANDA monocrystalline PV products, as well as its high-end polycrystalline YGE PV products  to more than 200 wholesale outlets and more than 30,000 electrical contractors across Australia and New Zealand.

“This partnership was a logical step as we see enormous synergy between our brands,” Cole said in a statement. “Yingli Solar and L&H Solar + Solutions are both focused on raising the bar on quality across the solar industry, increasing electricity yields through innovation and providing the highest return on investment for our customers.”

Giles Parkinson is founder and editor-in-chief of Renew Economy, and founder and editor of its EV-focused sister site 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.

Giles Parkinson

Giles Parkinson is founder and editor-in-chief of Renew Economy, and founder and editor of its EV-focused sister site 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

New tax on renewables won’t be retrospective, but will send “opposite message” to foreign investors

Controversial tax changes for foreign renewables investors have dropped one problematic aspect and kept another…

2 July 2026

One in 17 Australian homes now has a solar battery, as rebate installs pass 450,000 at one-year mark

Amid the hype around the launch of the Solar Sharer Offer, federal Labor's flagship consumer…

2 July 2026

State becomes first to ban retail energy “loyalty tax,” in bid to save customers hundreds of dollars a year

State acts where the national rule maker has declined to tread, announcing an Australia-first ban…

2 July 2026

Darwin residents want answers on toxic gas export emissions. Science shows their concerns are warranted

Evidence shows benzene and other gas-related chemicals pose significant health risks. So why is the…

2 July 2026

Electrochemical “bath” could bring spent lithium-ion batteries back to life, cut cost of recycling in half

Researchers believe they have found a way to recover almost the full life of lithium-ion…

2 July 2026

Thin white strips on brown slopes: Manufactured ski seasons are fuelling the climate problem

Ribbons of manufactured snow remind us that national parks should be front-line responses to climate…

2 July 2026