← All news

The China Solar Overhang: Why Your Warehouse Inventory Is a Liability

Aerial view of massive solar module storage facility in a European shipping port
The glut of low-cost imports is driving a race to the bottom for PV installers.
The country produces the vast majority of the globe’s solar panels, batteries, and wind turbine equipment, and most of its EVs.

The Race to the Bottom Has No Finish Line

Let’s be blunt: the 'China export boom' isn't a logistical success story for the average European installer; it’s a deflationary trap. When production capacity hits the levels we are seeing from giants like JinkoSolar and LONGi, you aren't just buying hardware; you’re buying into a volatile commodity cycle. If your business model relies on 'buying low and selling average,' you are one warehouse liquidation away from insolvency.

The Hidden Cost of 'Cheap'

I see installers bragging about securing Tier-1 modules at sub-€0.10/Wp prices. That feels like a win until you factor in the European Union’s tightening supply chain audits and the inevitable push for local content requirements. Every 500kW rooftop project you sign with these 'dirt-cheap' imports carries an increasing risk of regulatory friction. If the EU shifts toward more aggressive enforcement of the Corporate Sustainability Due Diligence Directive (CSDDD), those bargain-bin panels might end up as expensive scrap metal.

  • Margin Compression: Your hardware margin is dead. Stop fighting for it.
  • Service as the Hedge: Shift your value prop to O&M and performance monitoring. You can't control the price of a silicon wafer, but you can charge a premium for a 99% uptime guarantee.
  • The BESS Pivot: Hardware prices for modules are bottoming out, but integration complexity is skyrocketing. The money is moving from the module to the BMS and the EMS software.

Stop chasing the lowest price per watt. In a market flooded by Chinese overproduction, the company that wins isn't the one with the cheapest container on the dock—it’s the one with the most sophisticated technical wrap-around for the end customer.

Why it matters: Cheap hardware is a commodity trap; stop selling watts and start selling system reliability before the next round of EU trade policy hits your bottom line.
📰 Read original article at Canary Media →