Huawei SUN2000 Underperforming — Low Generation, Derating & Export Limiting
Your Huawei system is generating but less than you expect? Before assuming a fault, you need to compare actual output against realistic expectations. This guide walks through the most common Huawei-specific causes of low generation — from export limitation settings to inverter derating and string-level faults.
We analyse your FusionSolar data — string voltages, generation patterns, alarm history, and export settings — to identify the cause remotely.
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Check expectations before assuming a fault. Many Huawei systems are performing normally but owners expect more than the system was designed to deliver. UK solar generation varies hugely by season — a system that produces 30 kWh on a June day may only produce 3–5 kWh on a December day. Start with step 1 to establish a realistic baseline before investigating further.
6-step underperformance diagnosis
Start with FusionSolar data analysis (steps 1–2). If generation is genuinely below expectations, investigate string-level and hardware causes (steps 3–6).
Compare actual generation against expected yield
Open FusionSolar and check total generation over the last 12 months. Compare this against the expected annual yield from your installation documents or calculate it using the PVGIS tool (pvgis.ec.europa.eu) with your system size, roof orientation, and tilt angle.
Do not compare against the installer's quoted figure — many installers over-estimate yield. PVGIS is a more reliable independent benchmark.
Check whether an export limit is capping your generation
If your SUN2000 has a DNO export limit configured, the inverter curtails output when export exceeds the allowed threshold. In FusionSolar, check Settings → Power adjustment → Export limitation.
The system can never export to the grid and will curtail hard when household consumption is low. This dramatically reduces apparent generation on sunny days.
If the CT clamp or Huawei smart meter is disconnected or misread, the inverter assumes zero consumption and over-curtails even when the house is using power.
On the generation graph, export limiting shows as a flat ceiling on sunny days rather than a natural bell curve. If the graph peaks at the exact same wattage every day, export limiting is the cause.
Check string voltages and MPPT channels for imbalance
Multi-string SUN2000 inverters have separate MPPT inputs. In FusionSolar, check the string voltages and currents during peak generation hours:
A dead string on a dual-MPPT inverter can reduce total generation by 50%. This is one of the most impactful faults and often goes unnoticed because the system still "works".
Check for failed optimisers (if installed)
If your system uses Huawei SUN2000 optimisers (SUN2000-450W-P or SUN2000-600W-P), each panel is individually monitored in FusionSolar. Check the panel-level view for:
A failed optimiser reduces only the affected panel's output — it does not take down the string. But multiple failed optimisers compound losses quickly.
Check optimiser firmware via FusionSolar — outdated firmware can cause communication dropouts that look like hardware failure but resolve with an update.
Check for inverter derating events
The SUN2000 will self-derate (reduce output) under certain conditions. Check the FusionSolar alarm log for derating events. Common triggers:
Thermal derating is the most fixable cause — improving ventilation around the inverter or adding shade can make a meaningful difference to summer generation.
Inspect panels for shading, soiling, or physical damage
Panel-level issues that reduce output gradually and may not trigger alarms:
If FusionSolar shows one or two panels consistently underperforming compared to their neighbours (visible with optimisers), those panels are likely shaded, soiled, or damaged.
Why Huawei systems appear to underperform
Huawei SUN2000 inverters are efficient and well-instrumented — which means underperformance is easier to detect than on many other brands. The FusionSolar portal provides string-level and (with optimisers) panel-level data, generation graphs, alarm logs, and export data. The challenge is interpreting this data correctly. Many owners see lower-than-expected numbers and assume a fault, when the system is actually performing within normal range for their location, orientation, and time of year.
The most common genuine cause of Huawei underperformance is an export limitation setting that is too aggressive. This is particularly common on systems installed under G98 or G99 where the DNO required a limit. If the CT clamp or smart meter that measures household consumption is disconnected or misreading, the inverter over-curtails and the owner sees significantly reduced generation. This is a configuration issue, not a hardware fault, and is fixable remotely.
For systems with Huawei optimisers, panel-level monitoring makes diagnosis straightforward — any panel producing significantly less than its neighbours is either shaded, soiled, damaged, or has a failed optimiser. For standard string systems without optimisers, diagnosis relies on string-level voltage and current data, which still provides enough information to identify most faults remotely before an engineer visit.
Low generation — common questions
The most common causes are an export limitation setting capping output, shading from trees or new structures, a failed MPPT channel or string open circuit, inverter derating due to high grid voltage or temperature, and panel soiling or degradation. Check FusionSolar for string voltages, alarm history, and generation patterns. A system generating above 80% of its PVGIS estimated yield is broadly within normal range for the UK.
In FusionSolar, go to Settings → Power adjustment → Export limitation. Check the export limit value and whether it is active. A zero export limit prevents any grid export and causes heavy curtailment. Also verify the CT clamp or smart meter is connected — a disconnected meter causes the inverter to over-curtail. On the generation graph, export limiting shows as a flat ceiling on sunny days rather than a natural peak.
The inverter is deliberately reducing output to comply with grid code or protect itself. Common triggers include high grid voltage above 253V, high internal temperature, and grid frequency deviations. This is most noticeable on hot days when the inverter is in direct sunlight, or in areas with high solar penetration where grid voltage rises. Derating is temporary and normal — but frequent derating from poor ventilation or weak grid infrastructure should be addressed.
A single failed optimiser only affects that panel — it does not take down the whole string. However, multiple failed optimisers compound losses. Check FusionSolar panel-level monitoring for optimisers showing offline status, communication errors, or consistently low output. Firmware updates can resolve communication dropouts that mimic hardware failure.
The SUN2000 has thermal protection that derates output when the internal temperature exceeds safe limits. This is common when the inverter is in direct sunlight, an unventilated space, or a loft. Panel output also drops in extreme heat — solar panels lose roughly 0.3–0.5% efficiency per degree above 25°C. The combination means hot sunny days often produce less than mild sunny days. Improving ventilation around the inverter is the most effective fix.
Generation lower than it should be?
We analyse your FusionSolar data — string voltages, generation graphs, export settings, alarm logs, and optimiser performance — to identify the cause remotely. Most underperformance issues are diagnosed in a single session without needing an engineer on site.