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Renewable Energy Tariffs in Taiwan
- Taiwan Increases Offshore Wind Tariff 30 Percent--DigiTimes reports that new feed-in tariffs posted by Taiwan's Ministry of Economic Affairs have increased offshore wind tariffs by more than 30%. . . The new Taiwanese feed-in tariff for offshore wind now rivals that of Ontario's offshore feed-in tariff of $0.19 CAD per kWh. . .
- DigiTimes: Taiwan 2011 PV feed-in tariff rates lowered by about 30% from 2010--Taiwan's Ministry of Economic Affairs (MOEA) on January 28 announced the adjustment in feed-in tariff rates for various types of renewable energy for the year 2011, with rates for photovoltaic (PV) power generation reduced by about 30% on average mainly to reflect continued decreases in the total cost of installing PV systems. . .
- Bloomberg: Taiwan May Lower Solar Power Feed-In Tariffs as Costs Decline But Raise Tariffs for Wind Energy--Taiwan may cut the feed-in tariffs paid to generators of solar power next year because of the lower cost of installing equipment that converts sunlight to energy, a government official said. The island may increase the payments to producers of wind power, whose costs are increasing. . .
- DigiTimes: Taiwan's Solar PV Feed-in Tariff Exceeds 2010 Target--Taiwan's Ministry of Economic Affairs (MOEA) had received 981 photovoltaic (PV) system projects filed for application for feed-in tariff subsidization with total installation capacity of 151MWp, and had approved 452 projects with total capacity of 69MWp as of October 15, exceeding the target of 64MWp for 2010. . .
- Taiwan Sets Final Tariffs--DigiTimes is reporting that Taiwan's Ministry of Economic Affairs has issued their final tariffs for their feed-in tariff program.
- Taiwan Proposes Renewable Tariffs--Taiwan's Bureau of Energy has proposed specific feed-in tariffs by technology in response to legislation passed mid summer. . .
- Feed-In Tariff Comes to Taiwan by Ucilia Wang, Greentech Media--Lawmakers on the island country finally passed a feed-in tariff policy, which would be a boost for its growing number of solar equipment exporters. . .
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