Solar power in Switzerland

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Solar power in Switzerland has been growing rapidly in recent years due to declining system costs and a feed-in tariff instituted by the Swiss government. In 2013, cumulative capacity increased by 69% to 730 megawatts (MW) and contributed 544 GWh or 0.8% of the countries net-electricity production.[1]

In 2014, another 320 megawatts were added bringing total installations to 1,076 MW and giving rise to Switzerland entering the group of currently twenty countries with a solar gigawatt market. As per the IEA-PVPS' calculations, the installed capacity by the end of 2014 should be enough to generate close to 2% of the domestic electricity demand—a significant increase compared to the 0.8% contributed by solar in 2013 (see charts below).[2]

Historically, Switzerland had been a pioneer in solar photovoltaics in the 1980s and early 1990s but has since lost touch with the rapid-paced roll-out of solar by its world-leading southern and northern neighbors, Italy and Germany. However, the capped capacities that were put into place to avoid unregulated growth, were raised in recent years as the surcharge on consumed electricity to pay for the feed-in tariff had been increased by the parliament. As the country is phasing-out nuclear power and the Swiss electricity sector is about to become completely liberalized, the electricity market is currently undergoing its largest change in history.[3][4]

Domestic feed-in tariffs

Swiss Electricity by Source
Hydro–Run of the river Hydro–Conventional (dams) Solar Biogas Biomass Wind Waste Incineration Nuclear Fossil fuelCircle frame.svg
  •   Hydro Riv.: 17,759 GWh (25.1%)
  •   Hydro Dam: 19,681 GWh (27.8%)
  •   Solar PV: 2,900 GWh (4.1%)
  •   Biogas: 284 GWh (0.4%)
  •   Wood: 10 GWh (0.0%)
  •   Wind: 5,000 GWh (7.1%)
  •   Waste Incin.: 100 GWh (0.1%)
  •   Nuclear: 24,861 GWh (35.1%)
  •   Fossil fuel: 163 GWh (0.2%)
Electricity sector in Switzerland, in 2013. Mostly carbon free with hydro (58%) and nuclear (38%).[5][6]

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The federal government adopted feed-in tariffs to offer a cost-based compensation to renewable energy producers. The feed-in remuneration at cost (KEV, German: Kostendeckende Einspeisevergütung, French: Rétribution à prix coûtant du courant injecté, Italian: Rimunerazione a copertura dei costi per l'immissione in rete di energia elettrica ) is the primary instrument for promoting the deployment of power systems using renewable energy sources.

It covers the difference between the production and the market price, and guarantees producers of electricity from renewable sources a price that corresponds to their production costs. The following renewable energy sources are supported by the KEV remuneration: distributed small hydro (with capacities up to 10 MW), solar photovoltaics, wind power, geothermal energy, biomass and biogas (from agriculture, waste and water treatment).

The KEV remuneration is financed by collecting a surcharge on the consumed kilowatt-hour (kWh) of electricity. As in other countries, industries with a large electricity consumption are exempt from the surcharge, which has gradually been increased and stands at 1.5 cents per kWh as of 2014.[7]

The remuneration tariffs for renewables have been specified based on reference power plants for each individual technology. Feed-in tariffs are applicable for 20 to 25 years, depending on the technology. For solar PV, the time-span was reduced from 25 to 20 years in 2014. In view of the anticipated technological progress and the increasing degree of market maturity of renewables energy technologies (especially for solar PV), the feed-in tariffs are subjected to a gradual reduction twice a year. These reductions only apply to new production facilities that are put into operation.

Planned installations of renewable power facilities have to be registered with Swissgrid, the national network operator. As of the end of 2014, a growing waiting list for solar photovoltaic systems has accumulated as demand excess the capped capacities given by the currently available funds of the KEV remuneration.

Statistics

Installed PV capacity (in MW)
Year
End
Total
Capacity
Yearly
Installation
1992 4.7 n.a.
1993 5.8 1
1994 6.7 1
1995 7.5 1
1996 8.4 1
1997 9.7 1
1998 12 2
1999 13 1
2000 15 2
2001 18 2
2002 20 2
2003 21 2
2004 23 2
2005 27 4
2006 30 3
2007 36 6
2008 48 12
2009 74 26
2010 110 37
2011 211 100
2012 437 226
2013 756 319
2014 1,076 320
Source: IEA-PVPS, NSR Switzerland, 2013,[8] for 2014[2]
100
200
300
400
2006
2008
2010
2012
2014
Yearly Installation – Annually installed PV capacity in MW since 2005
250
500
750
1,000
1,250
1,500
2006
2008
2010
2012
2014
Total Capacity – Cumulative installed PV capacity in MW since 2005
European PV growth in 'watts per capita' since 1992
  <0.1, n/a
  0.1-1
  1-10
  10-50
  50-100
  100-150
  150-200
  200-300
  300-450
Number of Countries with PV Capacities in the Gigawatt-scale
5
10
15
20
2006
2010
2014
Growing number of solar gigawatt-markets
      Countries above the 1-GW mark
  • 2014 Thailand Netherlands Switzerland
    2013 Canada Romania
    2012 Bulgaria Greece India United Kingdom
    2011 Australia China
    2010 Belgium Czech Republic France
    2009 Italy
    2008 Spain United States
    2004 Japan Germany
      Countries above the 10-GW mark
  • 2013 United States Japan
    2011 Italy
    2010 Germany

See also

References

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  5. Swiss Federal Office of Energy SFOE, Schweizerische Statistik der erneuerbaren Energien 2013, p. 2 and 6, 25 September 2014
  6. Swiss Federal Office of Energy (SFOE) Electricity statistics 2013 (in French and German), p. 2 and 3, 23 June 2014
  7. Die Neue Zürcher Zeitung, (in German), 20 August 2014
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