Photovoltaic technology is a good technology and high-end manufacturing. However, due to the loss of production capacity, the products lost their scarcity, thus entering the price war of involution. Therefore, in order to break the involution, it is necessary to restore the scarcity of products.
So how can we restore scarcity to our products?
One solution is to provide customers with component products with higher power generation efficiency and better quality through market behavior, so as to obtain scarcity and premium. By building a green supply chain, our low-carbon footprint component products can get a higher carbon footprint premium in countries with carbon tariff barriers when they are exported overseas.
Another solution is to build a green supply chain in response to the call of anti-involution. Through the selection of upstream products by downstream enterprises in the supply chain, backward production capacity with high pollution and energy consumption can be eliminated, so as to carry out green integration and bring more benefits to the whole supply chain.
Of course, breaking the involution competition is not a matter of overnight, and the development of green supply chain business model, as well as the impact on capacity integration, is also a new way that we photovoltaic people have not yet explored, which requires our joint efforts.
I believe that the green supply chain will help us to re-label photovoltaic products as scarce, so as to get out of the dilemma of involution.