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Half of German solar firms could go under

Taiwan's Inventec to invest 95 million dollars in solar cell
Taipei (AFP) Sept 29, 2010 - Inventec Corp., a leading Taiwanese contract notebook computer maker, said Wednesday it will invest at least 3 billion Taiwan dollars (95 million US) to set up a solar cell unit. The company said in a statement it established the new unit to diversify its business and stimulate growth as profit margins in the contract computer-making sector have kept narrowing. Inventec is among a string of Taiwanese high-tech firms that have ventured into solar energy, an area expected to see rapid expansion in coming years as global warming concerns prompt a search for alternative to fossil fuels.

Chip giant Taiwan Semiconductor Manufacturing Co. (TSMC) announced last year an investment of about 192 million US dollars for a 20-percent stake in Motech Industries Inc., the island's largest producer of solar cells. TSMC, the world's top contract microchip maker by revenue, this year invested another 50 million US dollars in an American solar-panel maker. Taiwan has estimated its solar energy industry to be worth up to 200 billion Taiwan dollars by 2020.
by Staff Writers
Berlin (UPI) Sep 29, 2010
Only half of Germany's 50 major solar energy companies will survive the accelerating price war in the photovoltaic industry, a market study compiled by consultants Roland Berger indicates.

Due to oversupply and cheaper production, the consultants forecast prices for PV products to drop by 15 percent per year until 2015. Because of a "threefold threat of low-cost competition from Asia, declining sales at home and a dwindling presence in the world's growth markets" many German firms will have to offshore their production to low-cost regions or face bankruptcy, the analysts write.

"The photovoltaic market is getting tougher and tougher," Torsten Henzelmann, a green-tech expert at Roland Berger, said in a statement accompanying the release of the study. "The German PV companies have excellent technological capabilities, but they are not properly prepared for the difficult market climate."

Henzelmann added he expects that "only about half of Germany's 50 or so larger solar power companies will survive in the next five years."

The German government this year agreed to reduce subsidies for rooftop panels by 16 percent. The decision helped the German industry to a sales boom, as private customers ordered panels in droves to beat feed-in-tariff reductions set for July. Sales dropped afterward, however, and many German firms are trying to enter emerging markets in North America, India and China to make up for lost business at home.

Not all of them will succeed, Roland Berger says.

The study found that only six of the 16 largest German solar power companies have healthy finances and a strong strategic position when facing growing competition. The remaining firms are ill-prepared, mostly because they lack production size, market access and prestige.

"Few German vendors have a brand that customers recognize," Henzelmann said.

Small and medium-sized companies could suffer as the pressure to grow in production and sales increases.

"Since only a few German companies can achieve the necessary critical mass on their own, partnerships in the form of mergers or cooperative ventures make a lot of sense," Roland Berger writes in a news release.

Germany's Q-Cells, once the world's largest solar cell producer, during the global recession lost billions of dollars.

Thanks to the domestic sales boom in the first half of this year, the company expects a positive result for 2010. However, Q-Cells shares are trading at their lowest in years, with many analysts giving them a "sell' rating.

Apparently aware of the consolidation course in the industry, Q-Cells Chief Executive Officer Nedim Cen this week raised fresh capital on the stock market in a bid to transform the company into a full-service PV provider.



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