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Solar module market heads for slump in 2011

July 22, 2010 | Paul Buckley | 222901243
Solar module market heads for slump in 2011 Market analyst, IMS Research's new report warns that the PV industry's future is not all bright from Q4'10 and shipments will decline by close to ten percent quarter-on-quarter in Q1'11.  The warning comes despite PV module shipments forecast to increase for six consecutive quarters since Q1'09.

IMS Research predicts the first quarter of 2011 will be different to the first quarter of 2010 when speculation of additional cuts to incentive schemes drove unusually high demand in Europe and prompted extensive production capacity expansions across the globe. Research Analyst, Sam Wilkinson commented, "We predict the return of classic seasonal installation patterns and forecast that completed installations will decrease by nearly 40 percent in Q1'11 versus Q4'10. This fall in demand for installations after 31 December 2010, combined with huge capacity expansions certainly poses some problems for the market. We predict a sharp slowdown in module shipments from Q4'10 and PV module prices are forecast to decline once again during the first half of 2011."

IMS Research predicts that PV module prices will decline by eight percent in Q1'11.

According to IMS Research, after declining by an average of 10 percent each quarter in 2009, high demand resulted in relatively small price decreases from Q4'09 to Q1'10. Factory-gate prices of crystalline modules fell just two percent in Euros between the two quarters, despite the German FIT reducing by nine to 11 percent as planned at the end of the year. In Q2'10, average crystalline module prices are estimated to have increased by one percent in Euros over the previous quarter. By the end of the year, prices are forecast to fall just one percent from their levels in the final quarter of 2009.

Related link: www.pvmarketresearch.com










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