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Published on April 13th, 2013 | by Zachary Shahan

16

Top 10 Solar Module Manufacturers (IHS Report)

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April 13th, 2013 by Zachary Shahan 

Reposted from Solar Love (with minor changes):

Market research firm IHS has released a report on the top solar module manufacturers of 2012. Regular readers may think this sounds familiar. If so, it’s probably because you’re remembering the Solarbuzz report on the top solar module manufacturers of 2012 that we reported on in February. For the most part, the IHS report agrees with the Solarbuzz report’s top 10 list. However, there are some differences.

As with Solarbuzz, IHS reports that the top 2 solar module manufacturers of 2012 were Yingli (#1) and First Solar (#2). However, in the Solarbuzz report, Suntech came in at #3, while it came in at #5 in the IHS one. Compared to the Solarbuzz report, Trina Solar climbs from #4 to #3, while Canadian Solar climbs from #5 to #4.

Sharp Solar is #6 on both lists, Jinko Solar is #7, and Hanwha SolarOne is #10. However, Solarbuzz had JA Solar at #8 and SunPower at #9, while IHS has SunPower at #8 and REC Solar at #9.

solar-pv

For the rest of this article, I’ll just delve further into the IHS report.

Solar Power World had a good summary of the key movements in the top 10:

“In a year that proved very challenging for the entire PV industry, Yingli managed to increase its merchant shipment volumes by 43 percent year-over-year to leapfrog Suntech as well as U.S.-based First Solar, the two largest suppliers of 2011. First Solar managed to defend its position as the No. 2 module manufacturer, while Suntech lost significant ground and was displaced to fifth position behind Trina Solar and Canadian Solar. REC, the only Top 10 supplier headquartered in Europe, grew faster than most of its Chinese competitors in 2012. Increasing its module shipments by 31 percent year-over-year to 757 megawatts (MW), REC strengthened its position as a leading player in a highly competitive environment.”

I would think that more of the manufacturers not in the top 10 would have fallen by the wayside in 2012, but according to IHS, the top 10 in 2012 accounted for 40% of market share, while the top 10 in 2011 accounted for 46% of market share. IHS reports that the companies that took market share from the top 10 were other large manufacturers that had scaled up operations despite the global solar module oversupply and diving solar module prices.

Also, Japanese module manufacturers benefited from the solar boom resulting from the country’s aggressive feed-in tariffs, as well as the country’s strong preference for Japanese-made products (especially when it comes to technology).

“Japanese suppliers Solar Frontier and Kyocera expanded output and shipments massively in 2012, and both benefited from the current boom in Japan,” Stefan de Haan, principal analyst for solar at IHS, said. “Solar Frontier climbed from No. 14 in 2011 to 11th place in 2012, while Kyocera rose from No. 17 to No. 12.”



Nonetheless, some top 10 companies did grow market share.

“Canadian Solar, as well as Jinko Solar and Hanwha SolarOne were the only Top 10 companies that managed to grow merchant module shipments at a double-digit rate in 2012—in addition to Yingli and REC, of course,” de Haan said. “SunPower and Trina grew at a slower pace, while Suntech, First Solar and Sharp from Japan saw declining shipment volumes. Global PV end markets increased by a robust 14 percent in 2012, so on average the leading module suppliers effectively lost some ground.”

And a handful of Chinese solar module manufacturers —  Renesola, Astronergy, Hareon Solar, and JA Solar — increased output considerably, by over 200 MW each.

A trend in the solar market that has been discussed repeatedly is that the market is becoming more global, expanding beyond some key European markets that dominated demand to markets around the globe. From Solar Power World:

“Yingli generated 24 percent of its 2012 revenue in China. Jinko is another winner in this market, shipping approximately 400 MW to China alone in 2012 while also building up a strong presence in South Africa. For its part, Canadian Solar generated 26 percent of 2012 sales in the U.S. market and is also one of the strongest imported brands in Japan. Leading U.S. supplier First Solar, on the other hand, is anchoring itself to the Latin America market with the acquisition of a Chilean-based developer and its portfolio. These are a few examples highlighting the importance of timely and appropriate reaction for PV suppliers in a rapidly changing environment.”

Lastly, if you care much about the countries in which the top 10 manufacturers are based, here’s the breakdown:

  1. Yingli — China
  2. First Solar — US
  3. Trina Solar — China
  4. Canadian Solar — China
  5. Suntech — China
  6. Sharp Solar — Japan
  7. Jinko Solar — China
  8. SunPower — US
  9. REC Group — Norway
  10. Hanwha SolarOne — China

Any more thoughts?

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About the Author

spends most of his time here on CleanTechnica as the director/chief editor. Otherwise, he's probably enthusiastically fulfilling his duties as the director/editor of Solar Love, EV Obsession, Planetsave, or Bikocity. Zach is recognized globally as a solar energy, electric car, and wind energy expert. If you would like him to speak at a related conference or event, connect with him via social media. You can connect with Zach on any popular social networking site you like. Links to all of his main social media profiles are on ZacharyShahan.com.



  • Dawen Chen

    We can provide the best PV mounting system of world.
    Please contect me as:dawen.chen@versolsolar.com

  • Dawen Chen
  • Bob_Wallace

    Sa wat dee khrap, Add.

    That’s an interesting way to control panel angle. Folks can see it animated on the link. The amount of water in a cylinder controls the pitch of the panels. A water as ballast system.

    A potential problem I can see with this system is the panels might be rocked back and forth in the wind.

    I wonder if a simple hydraulic system might be better? Solenoid valves would extend or retract the pistons as the Sun tracks across the sky.

    A photocell at the bottom of a cylinder is probably all that is needed for a sensor. One computer could easily control an entire solar farm by systematically checking the amount of light hitting the sensor and sending signals to the valves as needed.

    • Add

      Sa wat dee khrap, Mr. Bob. It’s very nice to talk with you. Can you give youe e-mail to me or some information can contact you. I have some question to talk about with you about design’s company tracking system. I need you help me we can join in the solar business in Thailand. I have one solar project 5 Mw and I’m one business man in the solar company but I have some trobule about the tracking system.

      • Bob_Wallace

        You can email me at bobpublic@gmx.com

        I’m certainly not an expert on tracking, but perhaps I can help you find some information.

  • Bob_Wallace

    I’ve spent quite a bit of time in Thailand and I’m pretty sure you use the same Sun we do here in the US. ;o)

    I’ve never heard of a water tracking system and have no idea of how one might work. Can you link a site that explains what you are talking about? Post a picture?

  • Lightcometh

    Solar and wind and coal are already completely obsolete.
    Solar is a massive danger also as panels turn radioactive after 25-27 years. Imagine the coming mess.

    • Bob_Wallace

      Oh, bull.

      Begone.

  • Lightcometh

    Solar, wind, and coal will soon be bankrupt due to new techs coming online soon. I look forward to selling them all short. Get ready to join in everyone, the rally down will be huge.

  • Craig Dawson

    Why is Canadian Solar in China?
    Is it because of all of our Chinese restaurants in Canada?

    • http://zacharyshahan.com/ Zachary Shahan

      Possibly. :P Or the low cost of manufacturing there. :D

  • SecularAnimist

    We need to flood the world with efficient, durable, cheap, mass-produced photovoltaics — and the capacity to manufacture them — as rapidly as possible. It matters little which company or nation does it.

    • Bob_Wallace

      Absolutely!

      Climate change is a global problem. We need the globe to switch to renewables.

    • http://zacharyshahan.com/ Zachary Shahan

      No disagreement here!

      But I do find it interesting seeing how the market is changing, and keeping up with particular manufacturers a bit.

    • Cisco services

      yes completely do agree with you

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