16 September 2023
By Eric Wesoff, Maria Virginia Olano
Chart: Solar installations set to
break global, US records in 2023
Thanks to cheaper solar panels
and favorable policy, expect to see a lot more broken solar records in
the years to come.
Canary Media’s chart of the week translates
crucial data about the clean energy transition into a visual format.
The solar industry is having yet another
record-setting growth year, globally and in the U.S. A perfect storm
of policy, incentives and still-plummeting costs has made solar the
clear choice for new generation capacity worldwide.
Research firm BloombergNEF expects global solar
installations to rise by 56 percent in 2023, according to a September
report.
While solar deployments in the U.S., South
America and the EU are growing fast, China continues to lead the way —
it’s expected to account for 50 percent of new global solar PV
projects by 2024.
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But China’s leadership extends beyond brand-new projects: Its
installed capacity is expected to cross the 500-gigawatt mark by the
end of 2023 and is expected to double to 1 terawatt by the end of
2026, according to recent data from Rystad.
Meanwhile, total U.S. installed solar capacity is nearly 160
gigawatts today and will rise to about 209 gigawatts in 2026, or
around 11 percent of the global total, according to Rystad. Much of
that increase will stem from the Inflation Reduction Act’s generous
incentives.
Although a bit of a laggard compared to China, the U.S. solar
industry is expected to add a record 32 gigawatts of new capacity this
year, a 52 percent increase from 2022, according to a separate report
released by the Solar Energy Industry Association and analyst firm
Wood Mackenzie.
The trends driving this growth are set to continue. The price
of standard solar modules hit an all-time low of 16.5 cents per watt
in August, and BloombergNEF expects it to fall further by year’s end.
The United States doesn’t get the full benefit of these low prices
because of the tariffs it imposes on Chinese-made solar panels, but
the rest of the world does.
Given the still-plummeting costs of solar and America’s IRA,
this record growth looks to become an annual tradition both globally
and in the U.S. — trade wars and tariffs notwithstanding.
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