Ah yes Germany and solar energy... lets talk about a train wreck.
Germany produces more solar energy than any other country having committed to it big time and looking to make it a major source of power generation. They currently have 400 megawatts of solar capacity, which is actually about half of the solar electricity generated in western Europe.
Now as far as costs. I've had some trouble finding out the totals, but I know that they have invested about 2 billion euro in research and they have a few billion euro in low-interest loans, loan gaurentees, tax wirte-offs and other such things for the industry. I have heard the number ten billion euro float around as what has been spent, but I don't know that for sure.
As far as the price of solar: Even without taxes and such, in order to make solar energy a viable energy source the price of the electricity has to be subsidized. Germany talks a lot about how it's being done through private capital and such and that there has been about 10,000 jobs created by the industry for installing and such.
So for each solar kilowatt hour the price paid to the producer is 48.1 Euro Cent for industrial solar installations and more (something like 70 Euro Cent) for homes and for areas where they need more energy anyway.
The market price of electricity in europe is something like 8-16 Euro Cent per Kwh, so nobody would buy 70 Cent electricity. Thus the government makes up the difference.
Basically if you have a desktop computer, a crt monitor, a light and a television running at the same time, the government is paying about one US dollar per hour. For every hour that you run a refrigerator motor it's also about a dollar. If you have a well pump it could be a few dollars a day in electricity.
Oh and to put it in perspective: The 400 megawatt capacity is solar capacity. In other words: The maximum output of the panels. In reality you have to figure for weather and night. In a place like germany 20% average is generous. So you might figure 80 megawatts of equivelent electricity generation. (In other words, they generate as much as if they produced 80megawatts 24/7) That's somewhat generous but I think 80Mw would be a good liberal estimate. Certainly not much more.
80 megawatts. Lets think about how much that represents: That would be considered a "Microhydro" project if it were a dam. My power company consideres it's 200 megawatt plants to be the "Small" plants. So at the moment Germany gets about 3% of their energy from solar power.
Here's an article on it from IEEE:
http://www.spectrum.ieee.org/print/2706
Germany currently gets "Over 15 percent of their electricity from renewable" according to some pages. In otherwords, they get 3% from solar, 12% from hydroelectric and biomas burning and such"
The energy policy is driving them into a recession.