For companies in the renewable energy industry, that has created a major rush in sales — and an additional strain on supply chains.
“This [demand] has only gotten stronger with the war against Ukraine, which is happening on our doorstep,” David Wedepohl, managing director of the German Solar Association told CNN Business.
“This is something that’s very much on people’s minds.”
Jim Gordon, the CEO of Smartflower, said the geopolitical turmoil had also pushed more people to make the switch to solar. The company provides sunflower-shaped solar power devices to corporate campuses, universities and homes.
“Our business is booming because there’s a perfect storm of elements converging that are really lifting solar energy,” Gordon told CNN Business.
“People are concerned about energy security,” he said. “An autocratic dictator can turn the valve on a gas pipeline and shut off energy, but nobody can control the sun.”
Soaring sales
The company’s sustainability arm, which advises businesses on clean energy procurement, has also reached “an all-time peak” in consultancy requests, according to Konstantin Elstermann, the firm’s vice president of home and distribution.
Similarly, Sonnen, a German solar battery provider, has seen its orders “more than double in comparison to last year,” because of an “increased desire for [people] running their homes with renewable energy,” said CEO Oliver Koch.
In a statement to CNN Business, Koch said his team had noted “an additional uptick in demand since the end of February,” when the war began, and was “continuously expanding our production capacity to keep pace with demand.”
Demand is so high, Smartflower is now expecting to quadruple its sales in Germany this year, according to managing director Robert Sawyer.
“We’ve done more business in the first six months of 2022 in Germany than we did in all of 2021,” Sawyer said, adding that sales in the country had doubled so far this year.
Supply chain hurdles
Such booms don’t come without challenges, however.
The industry is currently facing severe labor shortages, said Elstermann from Schneider Electric.
“Some electricians are booked up three to six months in advance,” he told CNN Business.
“This bottleneck almost surpasses the current shortage of raw materials and production capacity. We know that the supply problems due to the pandemic are temporary, but the shortage of skilled workers remains,” Elstermann said.
Wedepohl said the industry was racing to address the problem. Many electricians who left their jobs over the past decade have been “reentering” the market, while roofers are also being called on to help with installations, he added.
“A lot of installers are out there putting out extra shifts, training people, bringing new people on,” he said. “It is a challenge, but it is definitely a moment that we hope we can rise to.”
The sustainability question
But Chancellor Olaf Scholz has made it clear the government isn’t happy about it.
“It is bitter that we now have to temporarily use some power plants that we had already shut down because of Russia’s brutal attack on Ukraine. But it’s only for a little while,” he said in a message last month.
Similar conversations are taking place across Europe.
This month, Austrian climate minister Leonore Gewessler called for more green energy projects to help the country wean itself off Russian gas.
“Because we see that our dependency on fossil fuels is used as a weapon in a war,” Gewessler said.
“Winter is coming,” said Wedepohl, noting that most homes in Germany were heated with gas. “Europeans … are also in this pretty collectively.”
— CNN’s Chris Liakos and AJ Davis contributed to this report.