SAN FRANCISCO, USA: Quarterly manufacturing capacity added during Q3'10 broke through the GW barrier for the first time driving PV equipment spending to a new quarterly high, according to the Solarbuzz PV Equipment Quarterly, a 200-slide report on PV equipment trends with accompanying cell manufacturer database.
Manufacturing equipment spending posted record returns, with c-Si ingot-to-module and thin-film panel spending in excess of $2.9 billion. Specifically, the dominant c-Si process tool types (etching, diffusion, passivation deposition and printing) each delivered quarterly served addressable market sizes over $120 million. Strong c-Si cell and thin-film panel expansion will continue through Q4'10 with a further 1.3 GW of quarterly ramped capacity projected to come online.Source: Solarbuzz, USA.
"Chinese and Taiwanese c-Si cell manufacturers are expanding at an unprecedented rate, stimulated by record levels of downstream demand through 2010," noted Finlay Colville, Senior Analyst at Solarbuzz. "This wave of capacity expansion is driving equipment spending levels to record quarterly highs, reflected by strong revenues reported by leading process tool suppliers to the PV industry during 1H'10."
"While c-Si cell capacity expansions in China and Taiwan continue to benefit qualified c-Si process tool suppliers based in Europe and North America, thin-film capital equipment spending remains increasingly fragmented by thin-film absorber type, substrate, supply-chain and manufacturing region," Colville added.
The Solarbuzz PV Equipment Quarterly provides quantitative 5-year forecasts and analysis to address technology trends, capacity expansions, fab productivity and equipment demand, while highlighting the key challenges awaiting c-Si cell and thin-film equipment manufacturers.
In 2011, c-Si cell equipment manufacturers must adapt product offerings to address new high-efficiency c-Si cell expansion, while thin-film tool suppliers have a window of opportunity as the second cycle of thin-film spending reaches its peak.
Q3'10 capacity expansion dominated by c-Si manufacturers
Capacity expansion during Q3'10 was heavily biased toward c-Si cell technologies, providing further indication that c-Si cell manufacturing has evolved into a mature process with qualified equipment readily available. New c-Si cell lines contributed an incredible 95 percent of the 1.12 GW of quarterly capacity brought online during Q3'10, compared to just 5 percent from all the thin-film panel types.
Furthermore, China and Taiwan cell manufacturers accounted for 80 percent of capacity added. Standard c-Si cell types dominated new lines ramped up during Q3'10, as c-Si cell manufacturers reverted to qualified process tools and employed low-risk process flows within these fabs.
Standard cell lines accounted for 78 percent of the new c-Si capacity during the quarter, with the remaining 22 percent spread across high efficiency variants. Top tier c-Si makers continue to implement high efficiency enhancement options, with 221 MW of new quarterly capacity comprised of incremental line improvements or dedicated selective emitter concepts.
Equipment spending on c-Si cell lines reaches $852 million in 2010
Equipment spending on c-Si cell lines during Q3'10 was $852M, down 5 percent Q/Q, following the record high in Q2'10 of $898 million. Tool spending was dominated by established c-Si cell makers such as China Sunergy, DelSolar, Gintech, JA Solar, Motech, Suntech and Solartech, but the industry saw sizeable contributions from new competitors in China including Hareon Solar, Jinko Solar, LDK Solar and ReneSola.
China and Taiwan now account for a combined 72 percent of all c-Si cell equipment spending over the trailing 12-month reporting period. With standard process tooling in strong demand, c-Si equipment suppliers such as Applied Materials, Amtech, Centrotherm, Despatch, and Roth & Rau were among the leading beneficiaries over the quarter.
Thin-film equipment spending grew 53 percent Q/Q, as a new cycle of thin-film capital equipment investment gained traction. Tool spending within this segment remains highly fragmented, with a wide range of tool types and supply-chains being implemented during the quarter. This was in part driven by CIGS tool spending which-while exceeding $200 million and returning 165 percent Y/Y growth-was spread across a wide range of absorber, substrate and process flow variants.
Equipment spending will remain strong for c-Si cell tooling though Q4'10, but with flat-to-negative growth. Conversely, the thin-film spending cycle will maintain its upward growth trajectory, as existing tool backlogs are delivered across a range of thin-film companies worldwide ramping up fabs for the first time.
However, PV equipment revenues are projected to decrease during 2011 as the threat of overcapacity impacts the expansion plans of leading cell and panel suppliers.
Source: Solarbuzz, USA.
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