To talk about the future prospects of the photovoltaic industry, we have to look at these three aspects.
First, all countries have launched carbon neutrality goals.
According to rough statistics, China, Japan, South Korea, Britain, Canada, Sweden, the European Union and other countries and regions have started carbon neutrality.
Among them, China proposes to achieve the peak of carbon dioxide emission by 2030 and carbon neutrality by 2060. Japanese Prime Minister Suga Yoshihide announced that he would be carbon neutral by 2050. South Korean President Moon Jae in promised to cooperate with the international community to achieve the goal of carbon neutrality by 2050. In June 2020, the Canadian government clearly hoped to achieve carbon neutrality by 2050.
In Europe, the European Union and Britain are expected to be carbon neutral by 2050, and Sweden has also announced that it will be carbon neutral by 2045. Germany says it wants to be carbon neutral by 2050.
Although Trump withdrew from the Paris Agreement, his successor Biden made it clear that the United States would return to the Paris Agreement and the World Health Organization.
Secondly, China has finalized the installed targets of photovoltaic and wind power.
The government of China not only set the goal of carbon dioxide emission peak and carbon neutrality in September 2020, but also explicitly set the goal that the installed capacity of photovoltaic and wind power will reach 654.38+0.2 billion kilowatts by 2030. At present, the installed capacity of photovoltaic and wind power in China is about 460 million kilowatts. By 2030, the installed capacity of wind power and photovoltaic will exceed 65.438+0.2 billion kilowatts, which means that the new installed capacity will exceed 740 million kilowatts in the next 654.38+00 years. It can be said that the development space is very large.
Finally, the competent ministries and commissions in the State Council support photovoltaic, and the policies are favorable one after another.
Since August 2020, at least seven ministries and commissions, including the National Development and Reform Commission, the National Energy Administration, the Ministry of Industry and Information Technology, the Ministry of Science and Technology, the Ministry of Housing and Urban-Rural Development, the Ministry of Finance and the Ministry of Ecology and Environment, have clearly expressed their support for photovoltaic development or issued relevant policy documents to support photovoltaic development.
The National Development and Reform Commission said that it is necessary to speed up the development of photovoltaic and wind power, improve the long-term mechanism of clean energy consumption, and promote low-carbon energy to replace high-carbon energy and renewable energy to replace fossil energy.
Generally speaking, the photovoltaic industry has a bright future.