The Near- to Mid-Term Outlook for Concentrating Solar Power: Mostly Cloudy, Chance of Sun
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Date
2021Type
- Journal Article
Abstract
The history of concentrating solar power (CSP) is characterized by a boom-bust pattern caused by policy support changes. Following the 2014–2016 bust phase, the combination of Chinese support and several low-cost projects triggered a new boom phase. We investigate the near- to mid-term cost, industry, market and policy outlook for the global CSP sector and show that CSP costs have decreased strongly and approach cost-competitiveness with new conventional generation. Industry has been strengthened through the entry of numerous new companies. However, the project pipeline is thin: no project broke ground in 2019 and only four projects are under construction in 2020. The only remaining large support scheme, in China, has been canceled. Without additional support soon creating a new market, the value chain may collapse and recent cost and technological advances may be undone. If policy support is renewed, however, the global CSP sector is prepared for a bright future. Show more
Publication status
publishedExternal links
Journal / series
Energy Sources, Part B: Economics, Planning, and PolicyVolume
Pages / Article No.
Publisher
Taylor & FrancisSubject
Concentrating solar power; Technological learning; Value chain analysis; Energy policy; Industry developmentOrganisational unit
09451 - Patt, Anthony G. / Patt, Anthony G.
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