pv magazine: In the space of just four short years, the Conergy UK timeline of achievement looks extensive. What is to come for 2015 and beyond?Robert Goss: We acquired Wirsol Solar UK in January, adding another U.K. entity to our group. Then we had a big rush in Q1, and managed to get our solar farms connected on time. Since then we have been working on two substantial projects, the Kencot Hill solar farm with both RWE and Foresight, which is 37 MW and up and running; and also the 21 MW Grange site near Bristol - and I must say it has been a pleasure building projects in the dry and warm. Right now, we are building 120 MW in the next rush, which runs until the end of March 2015. These projects range from 2.8 MW through to a 20 MW site, and we are on schedule with the majority of them, either with the fitting out works and heavy construction, or indeed moving on and ramming in the posts for the modules. So we are making some good progress. Last year, the weather was awful in January and February but actually rather good in December, so our basis this year is to try to get on a bit in December and work right up to the 19th and get as much done as we can so that we have an easier ride in the following three months. That is the situation with ground mount. At the same time we're setting up our rooftop team and have recruited a high-profile team member to lead that. Further information on that will come out shortly. The team will comprise an additional 4-5 people and will focus across the sector, from multiple roof housing projects through to commercial projects through to the public sector - schools and other rooftops in the public domain environment. How has DECC's extension of the grace period for ROC eligibility affected your plans?There are two projects where the planning permission is very old in that the original application was a long time ago. They were refused, went into appeal and have come out again, or are coming out again, and should they go through - which we think they will because we have made them more pertinent to the community - they will be great for summer projects. These are in the 10-20 MW range. What is Conergy UK's current PV footprint in Britain, and what does the future pipeline look like? We have 176 MW today, finished. Then 120 MW in the pipeline. So we will be certainly above 250 MW by the end of Q1 2015. How will the shift from the ROC scheme to CfDs shape Conergy UK's strategy in 2015?We will still have ROCs for sub 5 MW and the FIT for standard size solar farm projects - which is important. As for the CfD, I will not reveal exactly what we are doing at this stage, but needless to say we are having a look at it. If you have read some of the learned publications recently about how and when the U.K. will get close to grid parity - there is a lot of talk out there regarding this issue - and how quickly we'll be comparable with onshore wind, it is an interesting change in the subsidy. I think we are close to being there. We have had to deal with the upward pressure on prices brought about by the minimum import price (MIP) deal, which is gradually fading away and we may see the end of the MIP deal during 2015 or 2016, which will bring EPC prices down a bit. We are in a strong position to compete with wind anyway because we have a no maintenance, or low maintenance, solution versus a wind solution, which will always have higher O&M costs. So the CfD mechanism in theory makes sense: let's try to compare things on an equal basis and get the best possible value. Or in any case get a better value than what we are getting for our nuclear power stations. With onshore wind still eligible for the ROC until 2017, could the first few months of the CfD prove valuable for solar?In the first year it is possible, yes. The onshore wind sector operates on a much longer timescale than solar. We go from talking about it to deployment in a matter of weeks, whereas for wind it takes longer. So they have been given the breat