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Magazine Archive 10-2014

Global FIT overview

Feed-in tariffs: Western Australia sees reductions in payments after the repeal of the carbon pricing scheme. Egypt tables the idea of feed-in tariffs (FITs) in the sun-drenched country. France and Slovenia degress their FITs slightly as planned. EPIA speaks out on Italy’s retroactive measures. Missouri in the US cancels its SREC program.

Enough of false potentials

Inverters: Many investors are afraid of potential induced degradation (PID) when they use inverters without a transformer. However, last year Omron presented a device with which the negative pole can be grounded, preventing degradation. Does it make a difference?

Dying a slow death in Germany

Module prices: The minimum price regulation is paralyzing the European solar PV market.

Durable and light

Glass-glass modules: A growing segment, c-Si glass-glass modules are becoming increasingly lighter. Reductions in module weight are a result of the lighter glass being produced for this application by manufacturers in Europe, Japan and China. pv magazine investigates the impact thin, toughened glass can have on the module business.

Continuity and innovation

India market update: With the antidumping case behind it, the Indian solar industry looks to refocus on growth. Raj Prabhu, CEO and co-founder of Mercom Capital, reports on the state of the Indian solar PV market and the changes by the new government.

Balancing the grid with storage systems

Reserve power: A new business model aimed at accelerating amortization time for solar power storage systems is up and coming in Germany: participating in the reserve energy, or demand response, market can create an additional revenue stream for local solar power providers.

ABB going big on storage and renewables

Batteries and power conversion: Last month in London ABB gathered journalists and investors from around the globe to unveil its strategic and financial plan for the vast business. Much was made of the company’s 2014 acquisition of inverter manufacturer Power-One and the fact that ABB is now the second biggest inverter manufacturer in the world. Otto Preiss, the group’s senior vice president, and head of the power conversion unit, spoke with pv magazine about the role the former PowerOne is playing in ABB’s business and its collaboration with BYD in the battery space.

A bright future: solar in Brazil

Brazil: The Intersolar South America trade show was held in late August, right in the middle of the mild winter that Southern Brazil experiences. However, many of the conference-goers who had come from around the world to São Paulo were talking more about spring, and specifically a certain date in October.

25 years of optimizing

Trackers: Utility-scale single axis trackers may one day cover much of North America’s Southwest desert, including half a dozen states in the United States and in Mexico. The combination of strong insolation, readily available flat land, lowered cost, and well-refined engineering have made single-axis the design of choice for utility-scale PV installations in the region.

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