Exhibitor & Sponsor

2016solar energy costs decline to promote the global energy investment trend slowed

A significant decline in the cost of PV modules and project  construction, as well as a shift from small-scale projects to cheaper  capex utility-scale projects, is a main driver for an clean energy  investment slowdown in 2016, says Bloomberg News Energy Finance  (BNEF).


Total investment for this year is expected to fall “well short” of  2015’s upwardly revised US$348.4 billion; with investment in the Q2  totalling US$61.5 billion – and while this is up 12% from the  previous quarter, it is some 32% below the US$90 billion in Q1 2015.


In addition to falling prices, regulatory changes and “weak  electricity demand” were pinpointed as further reasons for this year ’s poor turnout.


“It is now looking almost certain that the global investment total  for this year will fail to match 2015’s runaway record. China’s  financing of wind and solar projects was even higher last year than  previously estimated, and the hangover this year caused by weak  electricity demand and policy changes in that country will therefore  be all the greater,” said Micahel Liebreich, chairman of the advisory  board at Bloomberg New Energy Finance.


However, Abraham Louw, associate for economics at BNEF, noted that the  low Q2 figures should not be looked at too negatively, given that last  year’s investment was “really quite groundbreaking”. Q2 2015  investment figures were indeed up 11% over 2014 and 30% over 2013.


Regardless, the turnout for the first half of this year was US$116.4  billion, down 23% on the opening half of 2015. Many of the big players  in clean energy investment were down; China was down by 34% to US$33.7  billion, and the Americas (excluding the US and Brazil) were down 63%  at US$2.3 billion. India was down 1% at US$3.8billion, the rest of  Asia Pacific down 47% at US$12.1 billion, Middle East and Africa down  46% at US$4.2 billion, and the US down 5% at US$23.1 billion.


Small scale solar projects attracted US$19.5 billion in the first half  of 2016, down 32% on H1 2015 figures. BNEF attributes much of this to  lower costs, but also a “marked slowdown” in Japan, a principal  player in such projects, with deployments in the country totalling US $4.6 billion in H1, down 66% on the same period of 2015.


Asset finance of renewable energy projects brought in US$92 billion  worldwide – a decline of 19% on H1 2015 figures. The biggest asset  finance deals of this segment were in offshore wind in Europe. Other  standout investment projects included the 100MW concentrated solar  (CSP) Kathu project in South Africa, the 400MW Enel Cimarron Ben  onshore wind installation in the US, and the 300MW AZTE Quaid-e-Azam  PV plant in Pakistan, at an estimated US$363m.


The public markets' investment in specialist clean energy companies  declined 56% from H1 2015, bringing in US$3.8 billion in the first  half of 2016, despite a sharp pick-up between Q1 and Q2 this year.  Tesla came out on top with the largest public market funding in Q2  2016 with a US$1.7 billion secondary share issue, and two secondary  issues by Chinese digital energy companies, Ningbo Sanxing Electric  and Genimous Investment, worth US$457m and US$432m respectively.


There was a 2% increase in H1 2016 in investment from venture capital  and private equity firms, totalling US$2.8 billion.

 

(author:Danielle Ola,Solar Media,PV-Tech.org)

Shanghai Ailing Exhibition Co., Ltd. © All Rights Reserved
Address: No. 71, Lane 25, Songfa Road, Baoshan District, Shanghai, China ( Postal Code:200441 )
Tel: +86-(0)138 1690 0991    E-mail:info@aiexpo.com.cn

Powered by ESPCMS