BCC Research Blog | Industry Analysis and Business Consulting

An insight into building-integrated photovoltaics, the emerging solar power technology 

Written by Olivia Lowden | May 10, 2023 1:00:00 PM

Building-integrated photovoltaics (BIPV) is a solar power technology with serious potential to transform the energy efficiency of buildings. With governments the world over scaling up sustainable investments, BIPV is primed to become a key element of the green economy. BCC Research expects the market to expand at a CAGR of 22.9% to reach $34.8 billion by 2027. 

BIPV technology is designed to replace traditional building materials at the point of manufacture. BIPV can replace the façade, roof, or skylights, effectively embedding sustainability into the structure of buildings. This automatically offers a value-added, cost-saving clean energy element to any building, be it a new build or a retrofit. Given that buildings today are a huge energy sucker, BIPV can help transform architectures into sustainable havens.

BIPV industry outlook

Wherever you look, the potential for BIPV is evident. Every installation needs a basis to mount modules. Given the fact there are more than one billion buildings in the world, with many of these representing perfect bases for PV panels, a multi-billion-dollar market opportunity becomes clear.

BIPVs make up a small but increasingly obvious component of the global PV market. Some BIPV applications are emerging as major growth segments that will reach gigawatt-scale annual sales within a decade. When annual capacity installations are totaled, the entire BIPV sector is found to already be beyond the gigawatt level of annual capacity. Unlike the rapid progress made in building PV capacity with utility-scale power plants, there’s not yet a method for complete vertical integration with BIPV projects in all existing and planned buildings. For this, companies need partners, affiliates, alliances, visionaries, and champions.

Interestingly, BIPV aligns with comparable megatrends. That BIPV does not require the development of additional land – an increasing concern with the growing population – makes a strong argument for its long-term success. Plus, the inclusion of PV capacity in building components offers cost reductions that simply cannot be achieved with standalone PV systems. There are few ground-level spaces to build multi-hundred-megawatt PV power plants at the point of use if hundreds of acres of open land are required in densely populated areas. Price continues to play an integral role in the purchase of PV technologies. In this regard, the pace of increase in perovskite solar cell (PSC) materials will almost certainly provide some disruption in the BIPV market. Solar energy at under $0.50/W installed at efficiencies of 20%, weighing 1 pound (lb.) per square meter requires few subsidies.