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Suntech sees costs halving in 5 years

June 4th, 2008 by kalyan89 in Press Releases, Reports, R&D reports, SC Company Reports

By Nichola Groom, Los Angeles, CA, June 3, 2008
Source: Reuters UK
http://uk.reuters.com/article/oilRpt/idUKN0336042620080603

Solar cell maker Suntech Power Holdings Co Ltd’s (STP.N: Quote, Profile, Research) silicon costs per watt should drop to $1 in the next five years, about half of current levels, enabling its products to compete without government incentives, a top executive said on Tuesday.  “We feel that in the next five years our product could survive without the need for government subsidies,” Suntech Chief Strategy Officer Steven Chan said by phone at the Reuters Global Energy Summit.

Demand for renewable energy has skyrocketed recently, yet the industry still depends on government subsidies to make power produced from solar panels or wind farms competitive with electricity from dirtier coal or gas-fired plants.  Today, Suntech’s silicon costs per watt are between $2 and $2.20, while non-silicon costs are about 70 cents or 80 cents per watt, Chan said. In the next five years, silicon costs per watt should drop to $1, while non-silicon costs should fall to between 50 cents and 60 cents per watt, Chan said.

Suntech expects production of about 530 megawatts (MW) this year, Chan said. One megawatt, or 1 million watts, is enough energy to power about 800 homes. Lower silicon prices, which Chan expects to start to see next year, would be a major factor in reducing the cost of solar power and eliminating the need for subsidies, Chan said.

Silicon is the key raw material used to make computer chips and most photovoltaic solar cells, which turn sunlight into electricity. Soaring demand for renewable energy, however, has led to skyrocketing prices on silicon, leading China-based Suntech to make several investments in silicon providers.

At the summit, Chan said those deals are reducing how much Suntech pays for silicon by 20 percent or more.  “The fact that we made these equity investments in various silicon providers has helped a lot,” Chan said.

Average selling prices on Suntech’s solar products should drop 10 percent next year, followed by annual declines of 7 percent thereafter, Chan said. To help expand its fast-growing business, Chan said Suntech over the next two or three years will consider setting up manufacturing facilities closer to the places where it does business, such as the United States and Europe.

The company’s recent acquisition of Germany’s KSL-Kuttler Automation, which will supply equipment for Suntech’s manufacturing process, will help the company open facilities in countries where production costs are higher than in China, where its solar cells are produced currently. “A big part of buying this German automation company is to automate our production lines in a way that we can set up production in high-labor-cost geographies and not really suffer a high cost structure,” Chan said.

Suntech shares were up 7 cents at $41.12 in afternoon New York Stock Exchange trade.

Korea, Libya to Jointly Harness Solar Power

June 4th, 2008 by kalyan89 in PV-General, Solar Energy - general, Solar Installations

By Cho Jin-seo, Staff Reporter, June 3, 2008
Source: Korea Times
http://www.koreatimes.co.kr/www/news/nation/2008/06/123_25259.html

If North Korea tried to teach Libya how to go nuclear, then South Korea may be able to help the Middle-Eastern country divert to a safer, cleaner and more plentiful type of energy ― the sun.  The Electronics and Telecommunications Research Institute (ETRI) said Tuesday that it will develop an advanced type of solar energy generation system for the Renewable Energies and Water Desalination Research Center (REWDRC) of Libya. (more…)

Steel Giant POSCO Hitches Solar Power in Korea

June 4th, 2008 by kalyan89 in PV-General, Solar Energy - general, Solar Installations

By Jane Han, Staff Reporter, 4 July 2008
Source. KoreaTimes
http://www.koreatimes.co.kr/www/news/nation/2008/06/123_25346.html

Steel giant POSCO installed the country’s largest solar power generators in its Gwangyang and Pohang facilities Wednesday, a niche business set to return about 1.6 billion won in energy sales annually.  Company officials said the 1-megwatt giant solar panels set up on rooftops of its storage plants will render approximately 2,500 mega watt hours of renewable electrical energy, which is enough to supply 500 homes every year. (more…)

Edison gives ESolar its first major power deal

By Tiffany Hsu, Los Angeles Times Staff Writer, June 4, 2008
Source: Los Angeles Times
http://www.latimes.com/business/la-fi-solar4-2008jun04,0,1575030.story

Southern California Edison said Tuesday that it agreed to buy 245 megawatts of power from solar plants to be built in the Antelope Valley by ESolar Inc., a unit of Pasadena-based business incubator Idealab. The plants, which are expected to begin operating in 2011, will provide enough electricity for about 160,000 homes, said Stuart Hemphill, the Rosemead utility’s vice president of renewable and alternative power. “We’re excited about the promise of solar,” Hemphill said. “It’s the great untapped resource of California.” (more…)

Kohl’s Brings Solar Power to New Jersey, Connecticut and Maryland Locations

May 31st, 2008 by kalyan89 in PV-General, Solar Installations

Menomonee Falls, Wis, May 12, 2008
Source: Kohl’s Dept. Stores press release/BusinessWire
http://www.businesswire.com/portal/site/google/?ndmViewId=news_view&
newsId=20080512005360

Kohl’s Department Stores (NYSE:KSS) announced today that it plans to convert more than 50 of its existing New Jersey, Connecticut and Maryland locations to solar power, representing nearly 80 percent of its locations in these three states. Currently Kohl’s operates 34 stores in New Jersey, 17 in Connecticut and 16 in Maryland. (more…)

Shares on Solar Companies up on German tariff cut

May 31st, 2008 by kalyan89 in PV-General, SC Company Reports

Associated Press/May 30, 2008
Source: Forbes.ciom/
http://www.forbes.com/feeds/ap/2008/05/30/ap5064578.html

Shares of solar power companies rose Friday after German lawmakers reached a tentative agreement on a milder reduction in state subsidies than some investors had feared.  Before dawn Friday, lawmakers agreed to cut the nation’s so-called feed-in tariff that obliges utilities to buy electricity from solar sources at fixed, above-market rates for 20 years. The subsidy has made Germany a magnet for solar energy investors.
(more…)

SunEdison raises $161 million for solar services and installing

May 31st, 2008 by kalyan89 in Solar Installations

by Chris Morrison, VentureBeat, 27 May 2008
Source: TheIndustryStandard.com
http://www.thestandard.com/news/2008/05/27/
sunedison-raises-161-million-solar-services-and-installing

SunEdison, a solar services company based in Beltsville, Md., has taken $131 million in venture funding and $30 million in debt to finance its rapid expansion and ongoing projects, including some of the largest solar installations in the United States. (more…)

REC Solar Selected by Livermore as Preferred Solar Provider

Livermore, CA, May 30, 2008
Source: REC Solar press release/Businesswire /yahoo finance
http://biz.yahoo.com/bw/080530/20080530005154.html?.v=1
REC Solar to provide deep discounts on solar electric systems to Livermore residents for a limited time

Leading residential and commercial solar installation company REC Solar announced they have been selected as a preferred solar electricity provider by The Livermore Solar Electricity Group. To celebrate, REC Solar is running a special summer program offering Livermore residents deep discounts on solar electric systems for their homes and businesses. (more…)

REC Solar expanding its operations in Colorado

May 31st, 2008 by kalyan89 in PV-General, SC Company Reports

Source: Denver Business Journal, May 22, 2008
http://www.bizjournals.com/denver/stories/2008/05/19/
daily33.html?ana=from_rss%20

REC Solar Inc. said Thursday it’s expanding operations in Colorado.  The private company, based in San Luis Obispo, Calif., currently has more than a dozen full-time employees in Colorado, mostly working on installing residential solar energy systems.  The company said Thursday it’s adding a commercial division at 9032 Marshall Court in Westminster. The company said it’s hiring and expects to more than double its number of Colorado employees in 2008. (more…)

Optical film maker Efun diversifies into solar cell industry

May 31st, 2008 by kalyan89 in PV-General

by Rebecca Kuo, Tainan; Rodney Chan
Source: DIGITIMES, 28 May 2008
http://www.digitimes.com/bits_chips/a20080528PD202.html

Taiwan-based optical film maker Efun Technology is diversifying into the photovoltaic (PV) industry by investing in a thin film solar cell company, whose initial target capacity is 40MWp by 2010, according to Efun.  Efun said the solar cell company, “Pa Yang” (transliterated from Chinese), will complete equipment installation in the fourth quarter of 2008. Efun holds a one-third stake in Pa Yang.

Pa Yang’s operations will be enabled by Efun’s already established connections in the upstream and downstream sectors, Efun said, adding Pa Yang aims to expand its capacity to 80MWp by 2011, and 350MWp by 2014.

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