2011년 9월 16일 금요일

Solar power use: Top 10 countries

1. Germany
Total use: 10,000 megawatts

Germany is the world leader in solar energy.
Germany is expected to stay the top buyer of solar panels through 2011.
Germany has a goal of 100 per cent renewable energy by 2050.
In 2009 alone, Germany installed 3,806 megawatts of photovoltaics solar energy capacity, which is more than Spain's total capacity and almost eight times more than what the US installed recently.

2. Spain
Total use: 3,500 MW

Spain was the world leader in newly installed PV solar energy (2,605 MW) in 2008 but its new installed capacity decreased tremendously (to just 69 MW) in 2009.
The reasons for this drop are attributed to complexity and delays related to a new government subsidy programme and a decrease in energy demand due to the economic crisis.
With expectations that both of these will improve in and considering its excellent sun irradiation and PV potential, Spain is expected to bump up its solar energy capacity again this year.

3. Japan
Total use: 2,700 MW

Japan has high national solar energy goal's to achieve 28 GW by 2020 and 53 GW by 2030.
Japan invested $9 billion in stimulus money in solar energy in 2009, and the prime minister also announced a plan to install solar power at 32,000 public schools that year.

4. United States
Total use: 1,800 MW

Supportive state-level policies are a major driver of growth of solar energy in the US.
With many large ground-mounted solar projects in the pipeline, installed capacity in the US is expected to grow significantly in coming years.
The cap on the federal solar tax credit was lifted in 2009, promoting growth in this industry.

5. Italy
Total use: 1,300 MW

In 2009, Italy had experienced the second-largest solar energy growth in the world.
Every two months, Italians install more solar power than California does in an entire year.

6. Czech Republic
Total use: 600 MW

A generous FiT and simple administrative procedures have put the Czech Republic on this list.
The market growth has probably boomed unsustainably, however, and if appropriate policies aren't put in place to slow it, the nascent solar bubble is expected to bust in the coming years

7. Belgium
Total use: 450 MW
Belgium is a bit of a 2011 solar energy surprise.
Belgium's success was from 'a well-designed Green Certificates scheme (which actually works as a Feed-in Tariff), combined with additional tax rebates and electricity self-consumption.'

8. China
Total use: 400 MW

China gets a lot of attention these days for its clean energy push, and for good reason.
China is a major solar panel manufacturer but hasn't installed a ton of PV itself yet.
However, it now has 12 Gigawatts of large projects in the pipeline and if those projects are implemented China is expected to jump closer to the top of the list.
According to China's national energy plan, it is expected to reach a total of 20 GW by 2020.
According to a recent PTI report, China is marching well ahead of all of them when it comes to capturing the solar market.
China's solar energy budget still stands roughly 20 times larger than America's investment in the same period, Jonathan Silver, executive director, Department of Energy told US lawmakers recently.

9. France
Total use: 350 MW

France has a well-designed FiT for building-integrated photovoltaics, so BIPV dominates the market there.
They've put protections in place to help avoid abuse of the system, and may revise the tariffs to accompany price speculations.
One key issue of concern in France is that although many MW of solar energy have been installed, a lot of them have not been connected to the grid. In 2009, 285 MW of capacity was installed but only 185 MW connected to the grid.
This is a major issue that needs to be resolved.

10. India
Total use: 200 MW

India has fast-increasing electricity demand and it has very high sun irradiation levels. Its government has also been moving forward strongly on clean energy.
The country has a goal to reach 20 GW by 2020 as well.
India could quickly rise higher on this list with proper government strategies.

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