The global polysilicon industry will return to the path of growth and increase its production by 6.5% in 2013, according to an analysis by Bernreuter Research.
The polysilicon market research firm projects the global polysilicon net demand, including that of the semiconductor industry, but excluding the consumption of inventories, will amount to approximately 250,000 metric tons (MT) this year.
The report predicts spot price to rebound to a level of US $20 to 25/kg by the end of 2013.
According to Bernreuter Research, polysilicon manufacturers will profit from the slightly accelerating growth of their largest customer, the PV industry, which makes up almost 90% of total polysilicon demand.
Johannes Bernreuter, head of Bernreuter Research, forecasts new PV installations to reach 35 to 37GW in 2013, with China, Japan and the USA replacing Germany and Italy as the PV growth locomotives.
In 2012 the polysilicon industry was plagued by overcapacities and a large inventory of 25,000 MT resulting from a production surplus in 2011. In addition, cash-strapped wafer manufacturers dumped their polysilicon stocks on the spot market in order to retain liquidity.
The wave of secondary sales from wafer companies and traders accelerated the slump of the spot price: the average rate for high-purity polysilicon crashed by 47% to a record low of $15.35/kg in 2012 after it had already plummeted by 59% in 2011.
Since September 2011, the severe price decay has forced about 50 polysilicon manufacturers, most of them small and medium enterprises in China, to abandon or suspend production. In the third quarter of 2012, all top producers began to bow to the price pressure as well and reduced the utilization rates of their plants.
According to preliminary estimates of Bernreuter Research, the global polysilicon production volume consequently fell to approximately 235,000 MT in 2012, a drop of almost 8% from the output of 255,000 MT in 2011.
“Along with the large inventories and the supply of thin-film modules, those 235,000 MT were nonetheless sufficient for a newly installed PV capacity of 33 to 34GW worldwide in 2012” Bernreuter says.
However, the latest shipment guidance of 13 major public solar module manufacturers points to new installations of only 30 to 31GW.
“The actual result could still be somewhat higher for two reasons: thanks to a better fourth quarter, several of these manufacturers may have exceeded their guidance, and other producers have possibly gained additional market share,” Bernreuter says. “If the markets in China and the US had a strong finish, 31 to 32GW are possible.”
Although polysilicon inventories have not completely been digested yet, the spot price reached a bottom at the turn of the year. An installation rally in Japan ahead of a probable feed-in tariff cut in April, healthy demand for PV systems in China and the introduction of punitive duties on polysilicon imports to China anticipated in February will drive the spot price upwards in the first quarter.
Even if China should impose duty tariffs as high as 50%, as is rumored, Bernreuter Research does not expect a strong revival of the Chinese polysilicon industry. Manufacturing costs of most producers are still too high and the quality of their product is too low, the report says.