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Solar seeks
its place under Spanish sun
|
Madrid
(AFP) - Sun-drenched Spain should be a natural for solar energy, and it is here
that the technology is making an effort to stand on its feet financially
without subsidies.
Solar seeks
its place under Spanish sun
Investors
are now betting again on solar power generation in Spain, which for a decade
was in the shadows as the country cut subsidies for the clean but expensive
source of energy.
A plunge in
the price of solar panels and lower construction costs has changed the maths,
and new projects are moving forward again.
Iberdrola,
Spain's largest power company, this month launched a solar project with a
capacity of 425 megawatts.
And last
week Spanish renewable energy firm Cox Energy signed a deal for the
construction of 495 megawatts of capacity in Spain, and another 165 megawatts
in neighbouring Portugal, in a 400-million-euro ($490 million) investment.
Companies
have sought authorisation for solar power projects across Spain with a total
capacity of 24,000 megawatts, according to the director general of Spanish
solar power lobby UNEF, Jose Donoso.
Subsidies
stumble
That is the
equivalent of 14 of the latest generation nuclear power plants that France
hopes to launch later this year, after a decade of costly construction.
Spain was
one of the pioneers of solar power-generation. Subsidies in the form of a high
purchase price for solar power lured investors and homeowners to install solar
panels, triggering an installation boom in 2008 that saw Spain's installed
capacity jump five times to 3,355 megawatts.
But the
global financial crisis, which ravaged Spain via a collapse of the property
market, led to a bust in new projects and the cash-strapped government was
quickly forced to abandon the subsidies.
Just 49
megawatts was added in 2015, and 55 megawatts in 2016, before picking up to 135
megawatts in 2017, according to UNEF figures.
However in
Germany, which kept up its subsidies, solar power swelled by six times although
the country does not receive as much sun as Spain, meaning each panel produces
less electricity.
The country
now has more than 40,000 megawatts of solar power, compared with 5,400 in Spain
at the end of 2015.
But the
sector has undergone "a complete reversal in less than six months",
according to Donoso.
Blazing
return
One reason
is that solar panels can now produce electricity at a lower price than
traditional power sources such as coal, gas and nuclear.
The cost of
solar power production plunged 73 percent between 2010 and 2017, according the
International Renewable Energy Agency (Irena), which predicts it will continue
to fall.
Companies
also realised the projects didn't need guaranteed prices from the state.
A tender
for solar power projects launched by the government in July had so many bids that
the price was capped at 30-31 euros per megawatt hour.
According
to the European statistical agency Eurostat, non-residential customers in Spain
paid an average 107 euros per megawatt hour last year.
Investors
concluded that "it is better to run risks in the market then depend on
regulated demand", Donoso said.
Moreover,
investors into renewables know how much construction and operation will cost
them, while traditional power stations have only a limited ability to lock in
prices for fuel.
"It is
much more profitable to invest in capital-intensive technologies (like
photovoltaic power) than technologies where the raw material comes at a
cost" like gas or coal, said the president of renewable energy lobby group
Fundacion Renovables, Fernando Ferrando.
Room to
grow
Donoso said
this explains why major Spanish power firms such as Iberdrola "who stood
aside from this sector" have suddenly jumped in.
"The
Spanish market will certainly be one of the biggest in Europe in the coming
years," he added.
A group set
up by the government proposes setting as a goal having a total of 30,000-60,000
gigawatts of installed solar capacity by 2020, Donoso said.
Spain's
conservative government has so far not made solar power a priority, said
Ferrando.
"We
only use the sun for tourism not for electricity," he said.
Solar power
represents just 3-4 percent of electrical power production in Spain, compared
with 20 percent for wind power and 16-17 percent for hydroelectric power,
according to the lobby group.
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