In the Asia Pacific region, the photovoltaic (PV) market is forecast to grow 39% on quarter and 130% on year in fourth-quarter 2011. Fourth-quarter 2011 installations of more than 2GW of PV capacity are expected, which will significantly raise the region's share of the global market this year, according NPD Solarbuzz . The region is poised to grow an additional 45% in 2012, as Asian governments introduce new installation targets. China's National Energy Administration recently revised its official cumulative solar installation target up from 10-15 GW for 2015, representing just one of the most recent examples. China is projected to account for 45% of regional demand in fourth-quarter 2011 and is on course to surpass both the US and Japanese market sizes in 2011. Elsewhere, regional demand is being driven by national incentive programs in India, while Japan is also growing rapidly ahead of its new feed-in-tariff (FIT) program. Other emerging markets in the region such as Taiwan, South Korea, Thailand, and Malaysia are projected to deliver a combined 700MW of additional demand in 2012. Non-residential ground mount systems are projected to account for 64% of the regional market by fourth-quarter 2012, up from just 16% in first-quarter 2011. This share growth will come at the expense of the residential segment which falls from 58% in first-quarter 2011 to just 20% by fourth-quarter 2012. Internal rates of return (IRRs) on PV systems in the four major markets will build over the next four quarters, ending 2012 at levels between 10% and 13%, as system prices drop faster than incentive rates. Project IRRs are at their highest for utility-scale PV facilities in China and India. The more mature markets of Australia and Japan see the best returns in the residential segment. In Japan, even with installed system prices significantly higher than other major markets, national and local incentives continue to provide favorable economics. Market constraints and downstream access issues exist in most countries in the region. In China and India, financing, land use, and regulatory issues are a significant barrier to large-scale projects. India's market is being shaped by domestic content requirements, while China's State Owned Enterprises (SOEs) account for more than 50% of the 16GW Chinese project pipeline. In Australia, policy disruptions have already forced many downstream players into liquidation. In contrast, a building international presence in the Japanese market is evidenced by a steady build in module imports from just over 5% of the market in first-quarter 2010 to a short-term peak of 21% in first-quarter 2011. "As the European markets no longer present certain growth, the Asia Pacific markets are increasingly the focus of international companies looking to expand. Companies seeking to take a share of this growth still face significant hurdles to define strategies to successfully access the downstream value chain," said NPD Solarbuzz analyst Christopher Sunsong. "These challenges, though, are unlikely to deter their determination to participate given the potential of this new regional market opportunity." Source: www.digitimes.com
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http://www.digitimes.com/NewsShow/MailHome.asp?datePublish=2011/11/23&pages=PR&seq=201