The Japanese Ministry of Economy, Trade, and Industry (METI) announced on June 17 the withdrawal of FIT certifications for 144 solar plant facilities with capacities totaling 290MW. While there are 288 approved PV projects totaled at 1950MW that have yet to enter the construction phase, METI has the right to revoke these projects’ FIT certifications if they do not start construction by the end of August, according to analysis from EnergyTrend, a subsidiary of Taiwan-based market intelligence firm TrendForce.
“Pressured by the administrative procedures mentioned above, Japanese PV developers have focused on searching for investment partners lately,” said Arthur Hsu, research manager of EnergyTrend.
Recently, Japanese PV developers have aggressively looked for investment partnership or opportunities to sell relevant certifications mainly because some of them have run into financial difficulties to complete required administrative procedures before required due dates.
“The FIT price for these cases is usually JPY 36/kWh. In contrast to other markets, return rates for Japanese power plants are relatively high. Moreover, Japan’s stable political and economical environment allows the nation to become the top one global investment region within the power plant market, attracting investors from China, Taiwan, Europe, and the U.S.,” added Hsu.
On the other hand, although Japan has better return rates, there are many details that need to be paid attention to when it comes to actual practices. The most common problem is the discordance between the actual subsidy received and the amount being made during the assessment. According to METI’s regulations, apart from getting FIT certification from the government, PV developers will also have to sign electricity sales agreement with power companies to complete the entire PPA process.
Once the PPA process is completed, final FIT prices will be finalized. This has become a common investment dispute since investors tend to neglect double check this part, which led to return rates that did not meet their expectations, added EnergyTrend.
This Week’s Price Quotes
Pressured by decreased demand and excess inventory, manufacturers continued to lower price quotes for certain clients. Multi-si wafer prices dropped 0.41% to $0.976/piece. Mono-si wafer prices also declined 0.17% to $1.192/piece. Due to uncertainties prompted from the U.S.-China trade war and weak demand in Europe, cell prices came to $0.361/watt, down 0.28%. Overall module prices further lowered because second-tier Chinese manufacturers’ quotations decreased again. This week’s module prices declined 1.02% to $0.582/watt, noted EnergyTrend.
Source: http://www.pcbdesign007.com/pages/zone.cgi?a=101651
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