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Magazine Archive 2018

48 hours in … Tokyo

About The megapolis of Tokyo ranks fourth in the world for the number of skyscrapers, has a metropolitan area larger than any other city on the planet, and effortlessly manages to combine a head-spinning mix of futurism and tradition in one easily-traversed cityscape. While the neon-lit billboards blaring obscure-sounding advertisements high overhead certainly fit the […]

A smart home, simply

Interview: Energy monitoring solutions are becoming smarter and more user-friendly with each new iteration. One particularly disruptive innovation comes from Belgium’s Smappee, which touts itself as the Shazam of home energy management. Company CEO Stefan Grosjean explained to pv magazine what that means.

Back for 2018: pv magazine Energy Storage

Special publication: Published in collaboration with Energy Storage Europe, the latest pv magazine Energy Storage special is a 32 page publication that will address some of the more technical, innovative, and upstream issues currently shaping the battery storage landscape.

South Australia’s big battery delivers

Utility-scale storage: The 100 MW Hornsdale Power Reserve was delivered by Tesla in under 100 days – a good thing as the company would’ve picked up the tab if it had failed to do so. But the project is also delivering grid services and demonstrating arbitrage trading at a pace and scale that is changing minds about the potential of utility-scale storage and the role of synchronous generation on Australia’s National Electricity Market.

Going with the flow

Japan storage market: Poised to grow by more than 4 GW over the next seven years, Japan’s distributed storage sector represents a potentially lucrative market for both domestic and international players. Winning supply contracts is one thing, but winning the trust of a demanding population represents an even loftier challenge even for some of the world’s biggest storage companies.

New year, new rules

Poland’s PV prospects: Last year brought no breakthrough in the Polish renewable energy sector. Of several auctions promised in 2017, only one was conducted at the end of June. Auctions scheduled for September and October did not take place. Auctions to be held in 2018 are supposed to proceed according to slightly different rules: A bill to amend the RES Act is in public consultation and new auctions will not be held until it passes the full legislative process. Piotr Mrowiec, of Rödl & Partner Poland, sums up the Polish PV industry in 2017 and outlines the legal framework for those considering investment in PV systems in 2018.

Europe’s solar moment

European PV: Europe is having a moment. Bolstered by newfound economic strength in times of geopolitical uncertainty, there is a tangible sense of unity on the continent. And it is not only in the economic sphere that Europe is bouncing back – the EU is silently making important strides in clean energy that will positively shape solar’s future for decades to come, writes SolarPower Europe Senior Political Communications Advisor Kristina Thoring.

Twenty years of industry leadership

Trina Solar: As part of the December 2017 China road trip, pv magazine spoke with Rongfang Yin, Vice President, Global Sales and Marketing, at Trina Solar’s headquarters in Changzhou. Yin provided insights into how Trina Solar evaluates foreign markets, also as possible production hubs for its solar panels.

Prognosis uncertain

American solar manufacturing: President Trump’s relatively measured 201 ruling surprised many. And while there are already reports of new hiring and expansions by U.S. module makers, the new tariffs will not be enough for a major revival of the sector.

Chipping away at coal

Monocrystalline growth: At last month’s World Future Energy Summit in Abu Dhabi, UAE, pv magazine interviewed Max Xia, Overseas Marketing Vice President at LONGi Solar Technology Co., Ltd., the global leader in the production of monocrystalline ingots, wafers, cells, and modules. Even after mono’s success story in the past two years, Xia sees tremendous growth ahead, so much so that he envisions solar PV challenging coal’s dominance in his home country China in as little as five years’ time.

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