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Silver accounts for 10% of PV module costs

The share of silver in the total cost of PV modules has increased by around 5% in recent months, according to US analyst Matthew Watson. He told pv magazine that silver prices are set to rise, adding that the metal will eventually account for an even larger percentage of overall module costs.

The share of silver in PV module costs has risen by around 5% in recent months to account for approximately 10% of the total, according to U.S.-based analyst Matt Watson.

“With PV module costs in the neighborhood of $0.018-$0.019/watt and silver representing around 10% of the overall module cost structure, and module and cell prices still declining, finding a means to lower the silver cost component is going to become an increasingly difficult task,” Watson told pv magazine. “Over the past 20 years, silver has averaged an 8.31% year-on-year growth in prices, which is greater than the current rate of design thrifting. This means lowering that silver $/watt component is going to be very difficult.”

Watson noted that silver is now sold at around $26 per ounce, but said that prices will continue to climb.

“When you study the silver market, electronics demand, led by the Solar PV markets, all have increasingly larger forecast demand,” he said, noting that silver is becoming more of an industrial metal with each passing year. “The projected solar PV module silver cost per watt produced is leveling out going forward as a result of these silver price climbs … As other cell and module costs decline, silver will consume an even larger percentage of the overall module cost as these trends continue.”

Watson, a former executive at U.S.-based CIGS solar module manufacturer SoloPower, is currently the CEO and founder of California-based Precious Metals Commodity Management LLC. He said he believes that the PV industry will probably not move away quickly from the use of silver, despite the recent jump in silver prices.

“In my career, I did extensive work on alternatives alloys without any real success,” he said. “Life testing and electrical efficiency losses always brought us back to silver alloys.”

Watson said that engineering teams use precious metals in electronics for a reason.

“Silver of course is the most conductive mineral in the world, with good corrosion resistance properties assisting the durability of the module,” he added.

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He acknowledged that nickel alloy has the potential to replace silver in solar cell metallization, but not in the space of a few years.

“We may need a couple of decades to get there,” he said, noting that in the connector market, copper and copper-nickel alloys are commonly used for both durability and electrical performance

However, Watson said he is concerned about the trajectory for PV market expansion and corresponding silver demand.

“In 2020, when global solar demand reached 115 GW, the industry needed around 98 million ounces (Moz), which represented around 10% of the global silver supply,” he added.

In 2025, when around 230 GW of new capacity is expected, the industry will need 156 Moz, or 15% of the global silver supply.

“And this considering all of the silver design thrifting baselines,” Watson said. “With the growth in other electronics applications, I’m sure the real silver supply continuity pinch point is around 30% of the global silver supply. But at present course, we will hit that 30% silver demand level by around 2046.”

On the current solar PV market growth trajectory, by 2050 some 332 Moz of silver will be needed to support 1.33 TW/year of new installations.

“Clean energy voices calling for an even steeper growth in solar PV, to as high as 3 TWs to 4 TWs a year by 2050,” Watson concluded.  “This trajectory of growth would break the silver market without substantial mining growth.”

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Source: pv magazine