Green Economy

A second sunrise

Solar energy

Economically unwieldly solar subsidies and the so-called “sun tax“ no longer burden Spain's resurgent solar energy market.

The Costa del Sol: The clue lies in the name, a synonym for sea, sand, and sunshine and a magnet for rain-soaked British tourists. All that sun does not just turn northern Europeans lobster red; the clean energy available from a nearly year-round sun in southern Spain—averaging 320 days—is also a hot economic proposition. Solar energy clocks in at around 5kWh per square meter, excellent for photovoltaic (PV) and concentrated solar power (CSP) plants.

Shadow Lifted
The rule of thumb in life seems to be that a government will eventually tax everything that moves and everything that does not. A case in point was Spain’s ‘sun tax’ levied on solar energy generation, a disincentive for citizens keen to harness their own power. Spaniards collecting solar power were charged EUR70 per month regardless of what they generated. To this we may add the previous administration’s reversal of hefty subsidies for solar energy that had resulted in Spain becoming Europe’s top solar generator.
The Sun King
Spain has endured some of the highest electricity prices in Europe, with the average bill over the past five years soaring 20% annually. This has reflected a relatively inefficient grid-interconnection, inefficiency calling out for sustainable solutions. A major rethink has lifted the sun tax, with a decree streamlining the commercial environment for sustainable energy generation. The scheme has discounted solar panel projects under 100kW geared at personal use, while lifting the cumbersome sun tax. The overarching objective today is a financially sustainable green energy policy.

Bright Targets
Spain aims at 100% renewable energy generation by 2050, more ambitious than the EU’s target. By 2030, the goal is the 70% renewable mark. Indeed, Spain already derived a third of its energy from renewables in 2017. Moreover, a ban on fresh fossil excavation permits stands to prop up the program. If fully implemented, the Climate Change and Energy Transition Law champions a commercial arena with the potential to confirm Spain’s green credentials.
In July 2017, the government held two renewable energy auctions amounting to the awarding of 3.9GW of capacity, in addition to a 20-GW capacity pipeline. All capacity had been required to be online by late 2019. Over 8GW of capacity was ultimately awarded, mostly for solar and wind energy. Projects formerly shelved during 2011-2016 were also realized, resulting in Spain seeing a monumental 145% YoY rise in new solar installations that year, alongside the addition of 135MW of fresh PV systems. The first auction, dated May 17, allocated just 1.5MW to solar, a shortfall that was rectified in the year’s second auction in July, where 3.9GW of the 5GW on offer were given to large-scale solar power plants, with 1,128MW going to wind.

In Numbers
Over the course of 2018, Spain’s annual solar energy generation grew 94% YoY, with around 90% comprising auto generation. This amounted to 261.7MW of new PV systems, according to Spanish solar energy association UNEF. With solar once again the hot commercial topic in energy, Spain was all set to host its first Intersolar Summit Spain in Barcelona in June. The trade show attracted energy corporates pursuing a more conducive investment climate of cost-effective generation through power purchase agreements (PPAs).
This is vital, with an estimated EUR100 billion required to realize the country’s renewables ambition. Currently, 1.5GW of Spain’s solar pipeline takes the form of PPAs. Around 8.8GW of additional capacity is earmarked by 2022, making for an estimated total capacity of 14.6 GW by end-2022. This would put Spain among the world’s top 15 solar markets by PV additions.
The top-three communities by installed solar PV capacity are Castilla-La Mancha at 922.2MW, Andalucia at 880.8MW, and Extremadura at 565MW. The three areas together claim 50% of Spain’s total PV capacity, with Castilla-La Mancha representing a full 20% of the national total.
The government is today’s solar champion in Spain. Teresa Ribera, Spain’s Minister for Ecological Transition, maintains that the key to the success of the new national plan is investor confidence. “We need to be consistent to facilitate good decisions for investment that are needed in the years to come,” Ribera said.

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