this post was submitted on 16 Dec 2025
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European producers of inverters, crucial components for connecting solar panels to the grid, are teaming up outside established European industry lobbying structures in a new challenge to China’s tightening grip on the supply chain.

Archived version

...

Solar panels, essentially a collection of wires and refined polysilicium, are generally considered too “dumb” to be vulnerable to cyberattacks. Not so the inverters, which are often vulnerable to easy access by ill-intentioned actors.

China dominates the solar panel supply chain, including the production of inverters, with 78% of the devices shipped to the EU coming from the world’s second-largest economy in 2023. This accounts for nine out of the 12 firms that dominate the EU market, potentially putting Beijing in a position to “significantly” affect the grid, according to a report by lobby group SolarPower Europe.

Now, Europe’s remaining inverter producers, including Austria’s Fronius, which recently quit SolarPower Europe over Huawei’s continued membership, have banded together in a bid to shore up their market – and, they say, the cybersecurity of Europe’s electricity grid.

...

The Austrian firm is joined by Germany’s SMA, Spain’s Ingeteam and others to create a “resilient, competitive, and cyber-secure ecosystem of Western inverter, storage, and EMS [energy management system] manufacturers,” according to a statement shared with Euractiv. The initiative was facilitated by the Made-in-EU solar lobby group ESMC.

Inverters are a highly sensitive topic because their vulnerability to attack poses a credible risk to Europe’s electricity security.

...

SolarPower Europe estimates that remote access to just 5 GW of solar panels through internet-connected inverters could, if abused, allow an actor or firm to “significantly” affect the grid. There are currently 13 manufacturers that could, in principle, commit such sabotage, the group suggests.

But the decision by inverter manufacturers to split from the main solar PV lobby has widened a divide with Europe’s solar sector.

On the one hand, SolarPower Europe represents Chinese manufacturers and developers who rely on their low-cost products. On the other, ESMC and the inverter producers argue for EU-based production and say the security benefits justify higher prices.

“Non-technical risk factors – such as governance structures, ownership, external influence, and the overall trustworthiness of entities – are as decisive for security as technical safeguards,” the new alliance says.

...

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[–] comrade_twisty@feddit.org 48 points 18 hours ago* (last edited 18 hours ago) (5 children)

I installed an 24 kWp solar system on my residence this summer. Before I decided on a company I called in offers from 6 companies with the explicit wish that no Chinese or American compnents are used. Only one company took that wish seriously and actually made me an offer using only European made hardware, they were 16% more expensive than the cheapest offer but ultimately got my business. I specifically want to be able to have power in a crisis which is why I also got a large battery installed, all of that would be no good if some malicious state actor could just disable my system.

My inverter is actually from Fronius and the company had issues getting it online at first because the setup was relying on Microsoft Azure which is blocked on my network. We got it working by installing the initial firmware update locally though. Afterwards we disabled all remote control features and I firewalled everything so it can’t connect to the internet. The installer company will contact me if there are any important firmware updates but otherwise my system will stay offline.

[–] Elchi@feddit.org 1 points 1 hour ago

+16% sounds not that bad.

Would have expected much more.

[–] fizzgig@feddit.org 7 points 14 hours ago

This is the way.

[–] gigachad@piefed.social 15 points 17 hours ago

Absolute Gigachad

[–] domi@lemmy.secnd.me 8 points 15 hours ago

Fronius makes really great inverters. I also use the offline updater cause I don't want or need their cloud.

[–] Droechai@piefed.blahaj.zone 6 points 17 hours ago

Which company was it and where is it based?