IMS: PV Inverter Industry Will Decline in 2011

Jul 12
08:04

2011

Dava

Dava

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According to “The World Market for PV Inverters, a market report from IMS Research, following 2010’s massive increase, the global PV inverter market is predicted to decline below $6bn in 2011, a fall of more than 10%.

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“We predict that installations will grow by 16% in 2011,IMS: PV Inverter Industry Will Decline in 2011 Articles driven by demand in Asia and Americas, however shipments of PV inverters will in fact fall by around 5% due to the oversupply into the market towards the end of 2010. In addition, both like-for-like and average prices will fall resulting in a decline in industry revenues“, commented Ash Sharma, Senior Research Director for PV at IMS Research and co-author of the report’s 4th edition.

Although the actual numbers are not low, but the large-scale growth in 2010 makes it difficult to keep the follow-up development .

 

IMS Research’s report “The World Market for PV Inverters” which relies on revenue and shipment data from more than 100 suppliers revealed a very mixed outlook for the PV inverter industry this year.

 

Sharma pay great concerns on suppliers’ conditions when commented on inverter market.

 

Suppliers of inverters have faced intense pricing pressure in 1H’11 and like-for-like prices have fallen already by 10-15% in some cases, “Some major suppliers have made even steeper cuts particularly in emerging markets to buy market share. However product mix change caused by new markets gaining share, introductions of new models, such as those with reactive power capability, and shifts in some segments to smaller inverters will help maintain average prices.” added Sharma.

 

As such the research firm’s report predicts that overall inverter prices will fall by only 8% in 2011.

 

Despite the outlook for industry revenues looking bleak, it is not all bad news according the report and industry revenues in 2011 will still be significantly higher than 2009.

 

“2011 will still be a good year for the PV inverter industry, but of course not so good when compared to the phenomenal 2010. Shipments will still exceed 20 GW again and revenues around $6bn – more than double the amount generated back in 2009”, commented Sharma.

 

Whilst total PV inverter industry revenues may fall this year, major growth opportunities are still possible for some suppliers: “Despite a major slowdown in some European markets in 2011, we predict robust growth in many Asian countries as well as the USA which will benefit some suppliers more than others. Furthermore we’re forecasting excellent growth for large inverters used in MW-scale installations as well as small 3-phase string inverters for commercial applications” commented Sharma. “Small 3-phase string inverters grew by a massive 560% in 2010 driven by high demand in commercial systems due to their ease of installations and scalability. Their penetration is forecast to increase further in almost every geographic market”, concluded Sharma.

 

When consider in long term, although it predicts industry revenues will decline this year, the report from IMS Research shows a very positive long-term outlook for the industry with revenues exceeding $10bn by 2015. That means that if we could make it through, there are still many chances to win this electronic component market. 

 Article source: http://www.hqew.net/events/news-article/247.html