If the Photovoltaics industry is going to play a significant role in worldwide electricity production in the future it all comes down to one word - scalability, the ability of a technology to expand its production capacity to very large sizes, thereby enabling significant cost decreases.
The World Needs Gigawatts not Megawatts
J. Peter Lynch
If the Photovoltaics industry is going to play a significant role in worldwide electricity production in the future it all comes down to one word - scalability, the ability of a technology to expand its production capacity to very large sizes, thereby enabling significant cost decreases. |
J. Peter Lynch |
What are Photovoltaics? Photovoltaics (PV), also referred to as, solar cells, is a technology that converts sunlight directly into the most valuable form of energy - electricity. Photo = light and voltaic = electricity. How Photovoltaics Work on a Home or Commercial Building
In addition to being the most valuable form of energy, Photovoltaics also happens to be the fastest growing industry in the world, with an excellent chance to remain the fastest growing industry for the next 25 to 50 years. The PV industry worldwide grew at a compound annual rate of 37.5% during 2000-2003, with the growth rate, exceeding 60% for 2003-2004.
What is the cause of this enormous growth and why is it expected to continue? The reasons are really quite simple. The market demand is enormous and Photovoltaics have a number of unique characteristics that give it clear and significant advantages over any other source of electrical energy. Unique Advantages of PV:
What the Photovoltaics Industry Needs What could an industry with all these unique advantages, plus being the fastest growing industry in the world, possibly need? The answer is quite simple. It needs to reduce its cost of production. Bottom line, it currently costs too much to produce Photovoltaic cells. In order to dramatically reduce the cost, the industry must deploy next generation technologies that are scalable to larger volumes that will enable the needed cost reductions. By now, I may have truly confused you. How could there be an industry with a product that is TOO EXPENSIVE be the fastest growing industry in the world? This contradiction is a result of the fact that the market is so vast and the current industry is so small, that despite the current tremendous industry growth, it is only the beginning of the industries long-term growth curve. In fact, as a comparison, one could view the PV industry in 2006 as being in a similar stage to the automobile industry in 1900 - an industry that is looking for a means to mass produce product and just beginning it's long term growth phase. Regardless of this dichotomy world demand currently exceeds supply (even at current "high" costs) and when the necessary decreases in cost are accomplished the demand will literally soar far beyond the capabilities of current technology. In order to address this coming demand surge, new next generation technologies, capable of far greater production volumes, hence process scalability will be needed. Worldwide Electricity MarketThe current world electricity demand is 4 Trillion Watts (4 Terawatts) and it is growing at approximately 2.5% per year. Current projections place demand somewhere between 11 Terawatts and 18 Terawatts by 2050.To illustrate the tremendous potential of the Photovoltaics industry and also the current and future demand-supply imbalance facing the industry let's look at a few macro numbers. Current worldwide annual production of Photovoltaics at the end of 2005 was approximately 1.5 Gigawatts (Gigawatt = One Billion Watts). For Photovoltaics to supply ONLY 5% of this demand in 2010, the worldwide production capacity would have to be 220 Billion watts, which is roughly 125 TIMES larger than current worldwide capacity. It is obvious that expanding the total industry capacity 125 times in 4 years is impossible. Worldwide Electricity Demand 2010 vs. Current PV Industry Capacity
The above table shows how large worldwide PV capacity would have to grow compared to current industry capacity, to achieve 1%, 5% and 10% of the worldwide electricity market. At least three points become very clear from the table above:
Currently 90%+ of the world's solar cells are manufactured using silicon technology. This technology is over 50 years old and the good news is that it has done an amazing job at dramatically reducing the price of solar cells over the years. The bad news is that the price needs to decrease even more if the industry is ever to reach its full potential and it cannot do this without technologies that can be scaled up to produce GIGAWATTS (billions of watts) product and not the current industry scale of MEGAWATTS (millions of watts) of product. Unless the industry develops a manufacturing technology that is capable of producing at the GIGAWATT level it can never make a significant contribution to future electricity generation. Importance of Development of the Next Generation of Manufacturing In addition to the obvious HUGE business opportunity, there may be other global wide factors that will necessitate the rapid development of the Photovoltaics industry, as well as, a host of new "next generation" clean technologies in the areas of wind, biomass and solar thermal. This future demand may NOT be able to be addressed by fossil fuel sources for a number of reasons that, for the most part may be beyond our control. Most significant limitations to addressing this demand via fossil fuels
Bottom LineThe future of the Photovoltaics industry and how significant a role it will play is a question of scale and could, in the worst case, become one of necessity.The answer is clear: the development of next generation technologies, with far greater production capacity, that will result in far lower cost of production must be accelerated now. Simply stated: the world needs Gigawatts of PV production NOT Megawatts. J. Peter Lynch has worked, for 29 years as a Wall Street analyst, an independent equity analyst and private investor, and a merchant banker in small emerging technology companies. He has been actively involved in following developments in the renewable energy sector since 1977 and is regarded as an expert in this area. He is currently a financial and technology consultant to a number of companies. He can be reached via e-mail at Solarjpl@aol.com. |
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