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Floating solar to drive up global PV panel demand

  • Spanish Market: Metals
  • 26/07/21

Record-high levels of solar energy installation around the world have seen the emergence of large-scale floating solar arrays, driving up demand for photovoltaic (PV) panels and the metals needed to build them.

Global floating solar capacity was just 2.4GW across 35 countries in 2019. But the market is gaining momentum this year, and individual project capacities have grown from less than 10MW to double-digit capacities in 2020 and at least 100MW in 2021. There are several projects with capacities of more than 2GW each under development.

Southeast Asia is leading the acceleration in floating solar deployment as the region looks to meet growing electricity demand with renewables. In the past, southeast Asia has relied on hydropower, but droughts in recent years have drained river and reservoir levels, contributing to blackouts. Floating solar panels are one way of increasing power generation while also reducing evaporation in reservoirs. In turn, the water has a cooling effect on solar panels, boosting their efficiency.

Singapore is adopting floating solar as a way of expanding its renewable energy capacity despite land constraints. Singapore-based solar developer Sunseap and Badan Pengusahaan Batam (BP Batam) are building a floating solar and energy storage system on a reservoir on Batam Island in Indonesia.

The $2bn project will have a generation capacity of 2.2GW and storage capacity of more 4GWh, making it one of the world's largest floating PV installations. Sunseap expects some of the electricity to be exported to Singapore through sub-sea cables. Construction will start in 2022, with completion planned for 2024.

The project demonstrates the leap in the scope of floating PV capacity, as Sunseap has recently completed Singapore's first offshore floating solar farm with a capacity of 5MW.

Vietnam expanded its floating PV capacity in 2020 as its overall solar capacity leapt by 10GW to 16.5GW ahead of the expiration of feed-in tariffs. Although the country is slowing its solar capacity additions to avoid overloading the power grid, it continues to add floating installations. The Vietnamese government is working with the Asian Development Bank (ADB) to run auctions for floating solar capacity, with a 300MW auction this year to follow last year's 100MW round. In 2019, the ADB invested in Vietnam's first floating solar farm, which has a capacity of 47.5MW.

Vietnam's largest floating installation is a 70MW complex completed in December 2020 to meet the feed-in tariff deadline. But this project will soon be surpassed, as Singapore-based investment firm Clime Capital is investing in a floating PV and storage project in Dong Nai province that is being developed by Blueleaf Energy, part of Australian bank Macquarie's Green Investment Group. The project has a capacity of 500MW of solar power and 200MWh of battery storage.

In neighbouring Laos, French state-controlled utility EdF is working with Lao Holding State Enterprise and the Electricity Generating Public Company of Thailand to start construction on a 240MW solar project at the Nam Theun 2 hydropower plant in 2022, with completion scheduled for 2024.

Malaysian renewables firm Cypark has issued a private placement to raise financing for the construction of a 173MW floating solar project. It is also building a project across two sites with a combined capacity of 100MW under an engineering, procurement and construction contract set to become operational in March 2022. The company is working with Cove Suria and Malaysian investment firm Kelantan Utilities Mubaarakan to install a 60MW project by the end of this year.

In South Korea, the environment ministry has identified five dams that could host a combined 2.1GW of solar capacity by 2030. One of the sites is Hapcheon dam, where solar firm Hanwha Q Cells is developing a 41MW project.

The new capacity would be in addition to a 4.6 trillion South Korean won ($3.98mn) 2.1GW project under construction on Saemangeum Lake. This facility is being built by Norway-based Ocean Sun and South Korean energy firm EN Technologies. The first phase of 1.2GW is expected to be completed in April 2022, with the 900MW second phase to follow in 2025.

European countries are also expanding their capacity. German renewable energy firm Baywa RE and its Dutch subsidiary, GroenLeven, recently commissioned two floating PV farms in the Netherlands with capacities of 41.1MW and 29.8MW. French energy regulator CRE closed bidding earlier this month on a 250MW offshore project and plans to issue tenders for two more 250MW sites.

Growing demand for solar panels at such large installations is driving demand for electronic metals such as indium, gallium and tellurium, as well as silicon.

The solar industry is expanding at a record pace, with global installed PV capacity rising by 138.2GW, or 18pc, to 773.2GW, according to trade association SolarPower Europe. The group predicts the market will grow by a quarter in 2021, adding another 203GW of capacity to surpass 1TW. The market has the potential to reach 2TW by 2025.


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02/05/25

South Australia closes Hydrogen Power SA office

South Australia closes Hydrogen Power SA office

Sydney, 2 May (Argus) — The state government of South Australia has rolled its Office of Hydrogen Power SA (OHPSA) into the Department of Energy and Mining (DEM), after scrapping plans for a 250MW electrolyser and 200MW hydrogen-fired power station. The OHPSA has been absorbed into the other state department, a spokesperson for SA energy minister Tom Koutsantonis said on 2 May. This comes after the state cut the A$593mn ($381mn) it had promised for its Hydrogen Jobs Plan in early 2025. The funds were reallocated to subsidise the 1.2mn t/yr Whyalla steelworks, which entered administration on 19 February . The associated Office of Northern Water Delivery, which was intended to support the green hydrogen sector in the state's upper Spencer Gulf region with new water pipeline supply, has also been incorporated within the DEM, Koutsantonis said on 1 May. SA's other major hydrogen hub planned at nearby Port Bonython was also overseen by the OHPSA. Development agreements with five companies have been signed for Port Bonython, including with London-based energy company Zero Petroleum for an e-SAF plant . SA is aiming to transition the ageing Whyalla steelworks to develop low emissions iron and steel products, but administrator KordaMentha is yet to finalise a buyer for Whyalla's controlling company OneSteel, which was formerly owned by UK-based GFG Alliance. By Tom Major Send comments and request more information at feedback@argusmedia.com Copyright © 2025. Argus Media group . All rights reserved.

Australia's Coalition eyes power, resource funding cuts


02/05/25
02/05/25

Australia's Coalition eyes power, resource funding cuts

Sydney, 2 May (Argus) — Australia's federal Coalition opposition has announced it will cut key energy rebates and resource sector subsidies, if elected on 3 May, to reduce forecast future budget deficits. The Peter Dutton-led opposition will cut programs, including the Labor government's A$20bn ($12.8bn) Rewiring the Nation transmission plan, and the A$15bn National Reconstruction Fund aimed at underwriting green manufacturing using domestic minerals. It will also unwind electric vehicle tax concessions to save A$3.2bn, and cancel planned production tax credits for critical minerals processing and green hydrogen estimated to cost A$14.7bn. Combined savings measures will improve the budget's position by A$13.9bn over the four years to 2028-29, the Coalition said on 1 May, cutting debt by A$40bn during the same timeframe. The announcement comes as opinion polls show Australia's next federal government is likely to force one of the two major parties into minority, after a campaign where cost-of-living relief promises have trumped economic reform policy. The centre-left Labor party is more likely than the conservative Coalition to form government at the 3 May poll. It holds a thin majority of just three seats in parliament's main chamber, the House of Representatives, meaning a swing against it would force it to deal with minor parties such as the Greens and independent groupings. Promising a stable government, as Australia emerged from Covid-19, Labor had benefited from a resources boom as Russia's invasion of Ukraine led LNG and coal receipts to skyrocket and China's emergence from lockdowns revitalised its demand for iron ore, which jointly form the nation's main commodity exports. But as markets adjust to a period of protectionist trade policy and predictions of a slowdown in global growth abound, economists have criticised the major parties' reluctance to embrace major reform on areas such as taxation, while continuing to spend at elevated levels post-pandemic. Australia's resource and energy commodity exports are forecast to fall to A$387bn in the fiscal year to 30 June 2025 from A$415bn in 2023–24. The Office of the Chief Economist is predicting further falls over the next five years, reaching A$343bn in 2029-30, lowering expected government revenue from company tax and royalties. Gas The Coalition has pledged a domestic reservation scheme for the east coast, forcing 50-100PJ (1.34bn-2.68bn m³/yr) into the grid by penalising spot LNG cargoes. Australia's upstream lobby has opposed this, but rapidly declining reserves offshore Victoria state mean gas may need to be imported to the nation's south, depending on the success of electrification efforts and an uncertain timeline for coal-fired power retirements. Labor has resisted such further gas interventions , but it is unclear how it will reverse a trend of rising gas prices and diminishing domestic supply, despite releasing a future gas plan last year. The party is promising 82pc renewables nationally by 2030, meaning it will have to nearly double the 2025 year-to-date figure of 42pc. This could require 15GW of gas-fired capacity by 2050 to firm the grid. On environmental policy, narrowing polls mean Labor's likely partners in government could be the anti-fossil fuel Greens and climate-focused independents — just some of the present crossbench of 16 out of a parliament of 151. The crossbench may drive a climate trigger requirement in any changes to environmental assessments, which could rule out new or brownfield coal and gas projects. Coal has been conspicuously absent from policy debates, but Labor has criticised the Coalition's nuclear energy policy as expensive and unproven, while the Coalition has said Labor's renewables-led grid would be unstable and costly because of new transmission requirements. The impact of the US tariff shock that dominated opening days of the month-long election campaign remains unclear. Unlike Canada, Australia is yet to be directly targeted by US president Trump's rhetoric on trade balances and barriers. But the global unease that has set in could assist Labor's prime minister Anthony Albanese, as he presents an image of continuity in an uncertain world economy. Australia's main exposure to Trump tariffs is via China, its largest trading partner and destination for about 35pc of exports, including metal concentrates, ores, coal and LNG. A downturn in the world's largest manufacturer would spell difficult times ahead for Australia, as it grapples with balancing its budget in a normalising commodity market. By Tom Major Send comments and request more information at feedback@argusmedia.com Copyright © 2025. Argus Media group . All rights reserved.

GM cuts guidance on up to $5bn tariff exposure


01/05/25
01/05/25

GM cuts guidance on up to $5bn tariff exposure

Houston, 1 May (Argus) — Automaker General Motors (GM) revised its 2025 guidance lower today to reflect $4bn-5bn of exposure to auto tariffs imposed by the Trump administration. Full-year 2025 profit guidance was lowered to a $8.2bn-10.1bn range, from the $11.2bn-12.5bn guidance given in the company's fourth quarter earnings call earlier this year. The new guidance takes into account clarifications to tariffs already imposed on automakers earlier this week. GM's tariff exposure includes $2bn of vehicles imported from South Korea and tariffs on autos imported from Mexico and Canada, as well as "indirect material imports." GM said it expects to offset 30pc of the exposure by producing an additional 50,000 full-size trucks/yr at its Fort Wayne, Indiana, plant and expanding battery module assembly in the US. GM will also work to ensure its supply chain is US-Mexico-Canada Agreement (USMCA) compliant and nearshore its production, executives said. More than 80pc of GM's supply chain is USMCA compliant, most of which is based in the US. US president Donald Trump on 29 April offered to offset a 25pc tariff on imported auto parts scheduled to be imposed on 3 May and to exempt auto parts from accumulating these and and other import tariffs. Trump imposed a 25pc tariff on imported cars on 3 April. GM on 29 April rescheduled its earnings call but released its first quarter earnings on schedule that day. The company reported sales of 693,000 vehicles in the US in the first quarter, up by 17pc from the prior-year quarter. Electric vehicle (EV) sales rose by 94pc to 32,000 units in the same period. Global sales rose by 7pc to 1.44mn vehicles in the first quarter compared to the first quarter of 2024. GM posted a $2.8bn profit in the first quarter, down by 7pc from a year earlier, which was partially attributed to higher costs. By Marialuisa Rincon Send comments and request more information at feedback@argusmedia.com Copyright © 2025. Argus Media group . All rights reserved.

US factory activity contracts for 2nd month in April


01/05/25
01/05/25

US factory activity contracts for 2nd month in April

Houston, 1 May (Argus) — US manufacturing activity contracted in April for a second month, as output and new orders slowed on tariff policy uncertainty, while price gains accelerated. The Institute for Supply Management's manufacturing purchasing managers' index (PMI) fell to 48.7 in April, down from 49 in March and the lowest since last November. The threshold between contraction and expansion is 50. The two-month contraction in manufacturing activity follows a two-month expansion preceded by 26 consecutive months of contraction. ISM's services PMI, a separate report that tracks the biggest part of the economy, showed nine months of expansion through March. "Demand and production retreated and de-staffing continued, as panelists' companies responded to an unknown economic environment," ISM said Thursday. "Prices growth accelerated slightly due to tariffs, causing new-order placement backlogs, supplier delivery slowdowns and manufacturing inventory growth." The manufacturing data follows a report Wednesday that showed the US economy contracted at an annualized 0.3pc pace in the first quarter as businesses boosted imports and stocked up on goods ahead of US import tariffs. The ISM's new-orders index came in at 47.2, higher than 45.2 in March but showing contraction for a third month. The production index fell to 44, showing a deepening contraction from 48.3 in the prior month. Employment rose by 1.8 points to 46.5, showing a slowing contraction. New export orders contracted faster at 43.1 in April, while imports entered contraction at 47.1 after barely growing, at 50.1, the prior month. The prices index rose to 69.8, up from 69.4 the prior month and signaling quickening expansion. The inventories index fell by 2.6 points to 50.8, marking a second month of expansion after six months of contraction. By Bob Willis Send comments and request more information at feedback@argusmedia.com Copyright © 2025. Argus Media group . All rights reserved.

Some Liberty Speciality creditors oppose restructuring


01/05/25
01/05/25

Some Liberty Speciality creditors oppose restructuring

London, 1 May (Argus) — Liberty Speciality Steel in the UK could potentially face insolvency after all Greensill creditors and a number of "other" creditors voted against its restructuring plan, sources at the company told Argus . There was a restructuring plan hearing held on 30 April, where all Greensill creditors and over three quarters of "other" creditors opposed the restructuring, which will now be voted on by a judge at the sanction hearing on 15-16 May. Should the judge deem those creditors positions' unreasonable, their vote can technically be overruled. But sources that attended the hearings suggest they will likely be taken into account, meaning the restructuring plan could fail, and the company potentially face insolvency shortly afterwards. However, UK HMRC, Together Commercial Finance and GFG creditors voted in favour of the plan — Liberty Steel is part of the GFG Alliance. "We had a productive meeting and the meeting chair, from Begbies Traynor, is now reviewing and analysing the feedback we received so we can proceed to the next stage in the process", a Gupta Family Group Alliance spokesperson said. Prior to the plan Speciality Steel was subject to a winding up petition by several creditors, having produced intermittently in recent years under mounting cash pressures. Asked about the potential for the government stepping in under its newly passed Steel (Special Measures) bill, a department for business and trade spokesperson refused to comment, but sources suggest the government has no plans to use the powers more widely at present. A GFG spokesperson previously declined to comment on the idea of government intervention in Speciality Steel. Speciality Steel has two electric arc furnaces, the T Furnace for Speciality Steels and N Furnace for Engineering Steels. Via its Stocksbridge High Value Manufacturing business it can conduct vacuum induction melting, vacuum arc remelting and supplies high-profile sectors such as aerospace. The company's Rotherham site has the Thyrbergh bar mill, a 750,000t/yr facility that could complement British Steel's longs range. Liberty's plate mills in Scotland, which are unaffected by the Speciality Restructuring, have previously been supplied with British Steel slab. By Colin Richardson Send comments and request more information at feedback@argusmedia.com Copyright © 2025. Argus Media group . All rights reserved.

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