Here in the US, some insurance companies are refusing to insure houses with solar panels and grid tied inverters. My friend does fire investigations and he told me that the solar fires are being caused by many factors, not just one or two. First off, the installers buy components based upon price almost universally, so they are getting connectors that are incompatible, cheap inverters (can't handled grid line surges and the thermals needed to survive), and the splicing devices that they are allowed to use in the electrical panels require good technique, i.e., are easy to make a mistake.
And then there is lightning, with these solar panels being mounted on roofs attracting lightning strikes. Add in lazy installers, and you get a witches brew. I don't know why the electrical code here allows the attachment of the inverter grid connection - literally in front of the main breaker. The smaller spliced wires are routed to another breaker panel that goes to the solar inverters. But they are spliced into the mains cable coming directly into the home before the main breaker. The splice connector is an interesting compression style insulation displacement connector. And electricians say that it requires expertise and care to use it correctly.
I would be interested if that is the same in Europe and other areas.