World's biggest solar firm sees profits hurt by power hike

    Published Wed, Apr 6, 2022 · 02:38 AM

    [SINGAPORE] Longi Green Energy Technology, the world s largest solar company, said its profits will be cut by higher power costs at one of its key manufacturing hubs in China.

    Yunnan province, home to 54 per cent of the company's wafering capacity, cancelled the preferential electricity prices it had been offering Longi since 2016, the firm said in an exchange filing Tuesday (Apr 5). Wafers are the ultra-thin slices of polysilicon that get wired up and assembled into solar panels, and Longi is the world's biggest producer of them, according to BloombergNEF.

    Longi shares opened 3.6 per cent lower in Shanghai Wednesday.

    Longi didn't say how much higher its power bill will be now that it has to pay market rates in the province. Electricity accounts for about 12 per cent of wafer productions costs, and Longi enjoyed a 50 per cent discount on power prices over one of its main rivals, BNEF said in a March 2020 report.

    Higher power rates will likely add 500 million yuan (S$106.8 million) in costs to the company and have less than a 3.5 per cent impact on after-tax profits, Morgan Stanley analysts including Simon Lee said in a research note Wednesday. Increased power costs could be offset by savings from making larger and thinner wafers.

    Higher costs for Longi are coming in the midst of a rare period of inflation for the solar supply chain. Wafers are about 76 cents a piece, up from 30 cents in the middle of 2020. Still, solar power cost increases have been small compared to ballooning coal and gas prices, and new solar installations in China tripled in January and February compared to last year.

    Electricity prices in China have been under pressure since last year, when a shortage of coal forced grids to curtail power to industrial users throughout most of the country. The government used the crisis to push through market reforms that allows utilities to charge more to large factories when coal prices rise.

    Longi also said that Yunnan's decision on power rates risks changing the company's plans for expansion in the province. BLOOMBERG

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