Jan. 11, 2018
Press release - Europe needs intact, thriving value chains for each renewable energy technology - 11 January 2018
Europe needs intact, thriving value chains for each renewable
energy technology insists Clean Energy Industry Forum in Brussels
on 09 January 2018
• ETIP PV calls for 20 GW of PV installations per year in Europe, with one third of
the supported market reserved for high-quality products Made-in-Europe
• PV researchers call for digitalised, easily reconfigurable pilot production lines to
de-risk new technology.
The renewable energy section of the Clean Energy Industrial Forum met for the first
time yesterday at a high-level event hosted by the European Commission. The Forum
urged the Commission to take bold action to build up Europe’s renewable energy
industry. Many speakers, representing the diversity of the renewable energy sector,
insisted on industrial policy support for all steps in their technology’s value chain,
crucially including manufacturing. They urged Europe to aim for high-quality
products. Julien Pouget, Senior Vice-President Renewables at Total, cal ed for
“quality, sustainability and eco-friendliness” to become criteria for products to be on
the European market. Others joined him, cal ing for the EU to press its high standards
on the countries it trades with to prevent carbon leakage.
Stefan Rinck, CEO of Singulus Technologies, Germany, was ETIP PV’s representative at
the meeting. He called for 20 GW of PV installations per year in Europe. Within this, he
said, at least “a third of the supported market [e.g. through tenders] should be for
sustainable high-quality products.” The criteria would be chosen to suit existing
European manufacturers or manufacturing start-ups. China has a similar measure with
its ‘Top Runner’ programme.
Florence Lambert, CEO of CEATECH LITEN (a big French research institute), joined Jef
Poortmans (PV Program Director at IMEC) in cal ing for “pilot lines for pre-series
production runs to decrease the risk for potential investors” in new technology. These
lines, said Poortmans, should be reconfigurable to accommodate several process
technologies and different cel processing flows. Lambert said it would be unwise for
Europe to stake all on the downstream end of the PV value chain: “We won’t keep
our leadership by only integrating renewable energy technology.” This, she said, is
something Asian companies “wil be able to do”, with the difference that they wil
ultimately have better “core technology” to integrate.
Dominique Ristori (Director General of DG Energy) chaired the meeting. He summed
up saying that Europe’s technology reaches the “highest standards and quality.” The
EU should “focus on innovation and the use of the most advanced products.” Earlier,
responding to speakers’ individual statements, he twice agreed that ensuring the
long-term future for complete technology value chains was “fundamental”.
Note to editors:
The European Commission’s intention to create a Clean Energy Industrial Forum was
first announced on 30 Nov 2016 in COM(2016) 860. The Forum contains three sections:
batteries for transport (first meeting 11 Oct 2017), construction (first meeting coming
up) and this one on renewables, whose members are mostly business leaders (CEOs
or senior managers).
The European Technology and Innovation Platform Photovoltaics (ETIP PV) is a
continuation of the European PV Technology Platform (EU PVTP) and the Solar
European Industry Initiative (SEI ) in a single platform under the new SET Plan
governance. The ETIP PV’s mission is in line with the Energy Union and the SET Plan
priorities with focus on “Renewable technologies at the heart of the new energy
system” and Europe to become “number 1 in renewables”. ETIP PV gathers all the
relevant stakeholders of the PV sector, with arrangements for cooperative discussions
with member states (MS), associated countries (AC), and the Commission services. Its
main role is to provide consensus-based strategic advice on all issues relevant to
progressing research and innovation (R&I) efforts.
For further information please contact:
Bernhard Krause, ETIP PV Secretariat (info@etip-pv.eu)
www.etip-pv.eu