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JUWI Solar expanding its activities in Italy, Spain and France

Bolanden (Germany), March 12th, 2008.
Source: Juwi Solar GmbH press release
http://international.juwi.de/information/press/
08-03-PMjuwiSolargoesInternational20080312.pdf

This month juwi solar GmbH based in Rhineland-Palatinate in western Germany is taking great steps toward expanding its international activities.
Whereas the solar business of the juwi group have been predominantly in Germany so far, an increasing number of projects in southern Europe are now poised to be launched. For instance, building work is due to soon begin at a large-scale, free-standing power station near Lecce in the region of Apulia in southern Italy.

Another free-standing project (1.7 megawatts) will go up near Vittoria, a town in the province of Ragusa, in the island region of Sicily. “Altogether we intend to install more than 20 megawatts in Italy this year,” says Bolzano branch manager Erwin Mayr. Due to the abundance of projects juwi solar GmbH will open two more branches in Verona and Bari.

The juwi group’s solar experts are also increasing their involvement in Spain. Construction of the Cortijo El Cura solar park in the municipality of Antequera in Andalusia has begun. This two-megawatt free-standing project in the Spanish province of Málaga was developed jointly with the Ansasol S.L. company and is due to go on line in summer 2008. Juwi solar has also founded a branch in Valencia to facilitate its presence on the Spanish market.

Juwi solar GmbH aims to install photovoltaic stations amounting to more than 2,000 megawatts of power production capacity by 2012 in Germany, Spain, Italy, France, Greece, the Czech Republic, the United States, Rwanda, South Korea and many other countries. Project development is underway and to support these sizable plans juwi is expanding its network of branches abroad. Juwi korea Co., Ltd. was recently founded in Seoul; juwi solar Hellas
is currently taking shape in Greece; and juwi S.A.R.L. has its center of solar activities for southern France in Aix-en-Provence.

“We are systematically conveying our quality and competence abroad. This entails many interesting vacancies to be filled at our headquarters in Rhineland-Palatinate, Germany, and also at our foreign offices around the world,” says Lars Falck, managing director of juwi solar GmbH.

Background information
…on the renewable energies market
In recent years the proportion of cleanly produced power in the electricity supply has grown constantly. In Germany wind, hydro, solar and bio sources now generate nearly 15% of the national supply. The German federal government’s sustainability strategy aims at a 50% share of renewables in the middle of the century. In Germany the Renewable Energy Sources Act (EEG) is the core instrument for implementing this strategy. It has become an essential building block for securing and creating jobs. The German renewable energies sector employs about 250,000 people.

…on solar energy
2007 was a record-breaking year for the German photovoltaic sector. According to the German Solar Industry Association (BSW), the number of solar power installations, predominantly on German rooftops, increased by around 130,000, bringing the total to 430,000 installations. Some 1,100 megawattspeak (MWp) of solar electricity capacity newly joined the grid last year in Germany, more than ever before in a single year. Benefiting from that are domestic manufacturers, suppliers and skilled workers. Sales figures of German photovoltaic makers increased last year by 23%, amounting to around EUR 5.5 billion. According to the BSW the total number of employed
in the sector is now 40,000.

The organization also says that there are now solar electricity installations totaling 3,800 megawatts of capacity installed in Germany. The three billion kilowatt-hours of electricity they produce is enough to power all the homes in Hamburg, the second biggest city in Germany. In 2005 and 2006 respectively, 850 MWp were newly installed; in 2007 some 1,100 megawatts of photovoltaic production capacity was installed, making Germany the world’s leading solar market.

…on the juwi group
The juwi group ranks among Germany’s leading renewable energy companies. In addition to photovoltaics and biomass, wind energy is its strongest mainstay. With about 250 staff juwi is involved in the entire value creation chain. By the end of 2007, PV stations installed by the company
numbered more than 650; their total capacity amounting to some 80,000 kilowatts – an investment value of approximately EUR 400 million. Some of last year’s showcase projects include several megawatt-scale rooftop installations and in South Tyrol one of the most powerful PV installations in Italy. In Kigali, the capital of Rwanda, juwi was commissioned by Stadtwerke Mainz AG (city of Mainz public utility company) to build a 250-kW plant, the largest PV installation in Africa.

At the end of April 2007 construction work began on the world’s largest PV installation in the Waldpolenz energy park. Located in Brandis, east of Leipzig, this 40-MW solar park is being built at a former military airbase. It is due for completion by the end of 2009. At the end of 2007 more than 13 MW were already in place.

German giant Bosch mulls Israeli solar energy

The company may begin with supplying equipment, and move on to energy production.
by Lior Baron, 6 Jan 09
Source: GlobesOnline
http://www.globes.co.il/serveen/globes/
DocView.asp?did=1000413992&fid=1725

Sources inform ”Globes” that German industrial giant Robert Bosch GmbH is considering entering Israel’s solar power industry. The sources added that Bosch executives recently visited Israel and met Minister of National Infrastructures Benjamin Ben-Eliezer and other officials, including executives of solar energy companies.  Bosch is initially interested in supplying equipment and installing thermal and photovoltaic panels at companies and households. Industry sources believe that Bosch may later build solar power projects, possibly as part of a consortium with Israeli companies. (more…)

Iran Inaugurates Its First CSP Solar Power Plant

by Karin Kloosterman, Jan 8th, 2009
Source: GreenProphet.com
http://greenprophet.com/2009/01/08/5807/solar-csp-iran/

Does a country that “promises” to wipe Israel off the map have a right to create nuclear energy for “power?” I must admit, news that Iran is looking to create power from solar energy puts some of my (irrational?) fears of living in Israel aside. According to the Iran Daily, Iran’s first solar powered station has been inaugurated.  The new plant is a concentrating solar power (CSP) plant, similar to one in Spain which reflects light to a central tower.   The plant was inaugurated at the beginning of 2009, in Shiraz, the Fars province. The CSP system uses parabolic mirrors which focuses sun onto a tube of water. Eventually becoming super-heated, steam in the tube is used to turn electricity-generating turbines. (more…)

Solar energy systems a Bust in Spain

Installers of solar energy systems are trying to unload megawatts worth of panels cheaply after buying too many at high prices earlier this year.
by: Ucilia Wang, December 3, 2008
Source: GreenTechMedia.com
http://www.greentechmedia.com/articles/solar-a-bust-in-spain–5297.html

Call it irrational exuberance or greed. Companies that couldn’t get enough solar panels to build power plants in Spain earlier this year are now trying to sell megawatts worth of panels at a deep discount.  Installers of solar energy systems that have purchased an estimated 1.7 gigawatts worth of panels this year were able to use only 800 megawatts of the goods before the Spanish government shrank a lucrative solar incentives program in September, said Paula Mints, principal solar analyst at Navigant Consulting at the Thin Film Solar Summit in San Francisco Tuesday.  As a result, some of these installers – Mints wouldn’t offer any names – are selling the crystalline silicon panels at around $3 per watt. When the same buyers gobbled up panels earlier this year, they also drove up the prices to as high as $4.50 per watt in Spain. In 2007, the average panel price was $3.50 per watt, Mints said. (more…)

German Scientists set new record for solar cells efficiency

November 30th, 2008 by kalyan89 in Press Releases, Reports, PV Industry - Europe, PV-General, R&D reports

Source: EU Research Info. Center / 20 Nov 2008
http://ec.europa.eu/research/infocentre/article_en.cfm?
id=/research/headlines/news/article_08_11_20_en.html&item=Infocentre&artid=9033

Researchers at the Germany-based Fraunhofer Institute for Solar Energy Systems (ISE) announced that they have succeeded in improving the efficiency of solar cells, which are designed to convert available light into electricity. The quantum electronic phenomenon called the photovoltaic (PV) effect makes this possible. The team said the effectiveness of III-V semiconductor multi-junction solar cells, used in PV concentrator technology for solar power stations, has been increased by 2.1% to 39.7% — a new European record. The work, which is funded to the tune of EUR 8.34 million, is part of the EU project FULLSPECTRUM. (more…)

MCI to Expand Solar Cell Encapsulant Production Capacity

November 30th, 2008 by kalyan89 in Press Releases, Reports, PV Industry - Asia, PV Industry - Europe

Nikkei Electronics Asia, Oct 30, 2008
Source: TechOn
http://techon.nikkeibp.co.jp/english/NEWS_EN/20081030/160514/

Mitsui Chemicals Inc (MCI) has announced that its subsidiary, Mitsui Chemicals Fabro Inc (MFI), will expand its production capacity for a solar cell encapsulant, SOLAR EVA. MFI is a manufacturer and supplier of SOLA R EVA.
(more…)

Sharp plans joint solar venture with Enel

Tokyo, November 27, 2008
Source: Reuters/International Herald Tribune
http://www.iht.com/articles/2008/11/27/business/sharp.php

Sharp of Japan, Enel of Italy and a third manufacturer will invest more than $2.6 billion in Italian solar power ventures to tap growing demand for cleaner energy.  Top solar power firms are hurrying to expand capacity even as the sector smarts from a worsening global economy, which is drying up financing for new ventures and forcing smaller solar power firms to push back investment.  Sharp, the world’s No.2 maker of solar cells after the German company Q-Cells, said it and Enel planned to spend about ¥100 billion, or $1.05 billion, to set up solar power generating plants in Italy with a total generating capacity of 189 megawatts by the end of 2012. (more…)

Sharp, Italy’s Enel discussing solar venture

By MARI YAMAGUCHI, 26 Nov 2008
Source: Associated Press /Forbes.com
http://www.forbes.com/feeds/ap/2008/11/26/ap5749538.html

Sharp said Thursday it’s in talks with Italian utility company Enel to set up a European joint venture to produce solar panels – a move that highlights the Japanese electronics company’s ambitions in this key green business.  “We are considering cooperation with Enel SpA to jointly produce solar cells,” Sharp Corp. (other-otc: SHCAY.PK – news – people ) spokeswoman Miyuki Nakayama said, while declining to elaborate. Sharp will give details at a news conference later in the day, she said.
(more…)

Is the Sun Setting on Solar Power in Spain?

With waning subsidies and other attractive markets, can Spain maintain its lead in solar tech?
By Carolyn Whelan, October 20, 2008
Source: Scientific American
http://www.sciam.com/article.cfm?id=is-the-sun-setting-on-solar-power-in-spain

On the outskirts of Seville, Spain, 600 rotating mirrors send shafts of light to a collector atop a soaring 380-foot- (115-meter-) tall tower. Its scalding 480-degree-Fahrenheit (250-degree-Celsius) steam drives a turbine generating a peak capacity of 11 megawatts (MW) of electricity for the national grid. This “power tower” is the first of nine to be built by Spanish engineering giant Abengoa Solar, which all told will produce enough electricity for 153,000 homes by 2013. (more…)

Village Community Hall in UK gets photovoltaic solar panels

Source. DEAdirect.com, 23.10.2008
http://www.deadirect.co.uk/News/Micro-Generation/October-2008/
Village-hall-gets-photovoltaic-solar-panels?id=1260

A village community hall in the Lake District has been equipped with a photovoltaic roof as part of a £100,000 refurbishment.  The new roof has been paid for through donations and grants including the Lake District National Park and the Department for Environment, Food and Rural Affairs.  Based on silicon, the photovoltaic solar panels convert the sun’s light into energy, which could be used to power the Lowick Community Hall directly or be fed into the national grid. (more…)

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