France remains an 'attractive' solar market, and a 'stable environment' for potential investors, according to Ksenia Dray.
Why it matters: Stop betting your entire pipeline on government tenders; the PPA market offers better margins and more control for those willing to do the sales work.
The Comfort Trap
If you’re a mid-sized developer in France, you’ve been trained to view CRE (Commission de Régulation de l'Énergie) auctions as the finish line. It’s a safe, state-backed paycheck. But treating corporate Power Purchase Agreements (PPAs) as a 'second choice' isn't just conservative—it’s a dangerous long-term strategy that leaves you vulnerable to government policy shifts.
Why the PPA Pivot is Non-Negotiable
The auction model is essentially a race to the bottom on price. When you rely solely on tender volumes, you are at the mercy of bureaucratic timelines and the inevitable saturation of grid connection points. Meanwhile, the PPA market is where the real margin resides. With the REPowerEU directives pushing for faster permitting and corporate sustainability reporting (CSRD) forcing companies like Schneider Electric or Carrefour to decarbonize, the demand for direct energy off-take is exploding.
If you are an installer, stop waiting for the next tender round. Start building the financial modeling software required to pitch direct PPAs to your local industrial clients. The state is a client, but they aren't the only one with a balance sheet. The developers who own the customer relationship today will be the ones buying out the auction-dependent 'zombie' developers in five years.