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SunPower Modules Recognized for Superior Quality and Efficiency

April 30th, 2007 by kalyan89 in Press Releases, Reports, PV-General, SC Company Reports

Source: Huliq.com
http://www.huliq.com/20014/

SunPower Corporation, a Silicon Valley-based manufacturer of high-efficiency, commercially available solar cells, panels and systems, announced today that Sandia National Laboratories measured SunPower’s SPR-315 solar panel at the highest recorded conversion efficiency ever tested by Sandia for a commercially available, mass produced solar panel. This announcement follows recent renewable energy industry accolades from PHOTON Magazine and Energy Focus Ltd., (ENF) in the first quarter of 2007, underscoring SunPower’s position as the global leader in solar electric technology efficiency, performance and satisfaction.
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Japan’s Sanyo builds its largest solar plant in Hungary -New unit to triple annual capacity

By United Press International
BUDAPEST, Hungary April 4, 2007
Source: Worldpeace Herald
http://wpherald.com/articles/4092/1/

Japan’s Sanyo has completed a new unit at its solar cell plant in Hungary that is to triple its annual capacity to 720,000 units in 2008.  The plant at Dorog, outside Budapest, will be Sanyo Electric’s largest facility producing solar cells in the world, the Hungarian news agency MTI reported Wednesday.  The new 70,000 square feet unit is part of a $5.3 million investment designed to triple its solar panel capacity, MTI said quoting the Hungarian business daily Napi Gazdasag.
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SunEdison Names Suntech as Key Supplier for 8.22-MW Alamosa Photovoltaic Plant

April 28, 2007 ALAMOSA, Colo. & BELTSVILLE, Md.
Source: Press Release from SunEdison
http://www.renewableenergyaccess.com/rea/partner/story?id=48312

SunEdison, the leading solar energy services provider, today announced that it has selected Suntech Power Holdings as key supplier for the 8.22-megawatt Alamosa Photovoltaic Solar Plant.  “Meeting the demands needed for the 8.22 megawatt Alamosa Photovoltaic Solar Plant is critical. The choice of our cornerstone supplier for this project – Suntech – was driven by the stringent selection criteria established by the SunEdison installation teams. It is important to SunEdison that we partner with leading vendors, who help simplify the complexity of solar through the delivery of robust, proven product,” noted Jigar Shah, CEO of SunEdison.
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German based Solar Energy Company SolarWorld eager to tap Asian market

April 30th, 2007 by kalyan89 in PV-General, SC Company Reports, Solar Energy - general

April 30, 2007, Singapore
Source: The China Post
http://www.chinapost.com.tw/news/archives/business/2007430/108439.htm

SolarWorld, the third largest solar energy company, is eager to tap into the rapidly growing Asia-Pacific energy market, founder and chief executive Frank Asbeck said in a published report on Saturday.  The German-based firm is planning to invest S$300 million (US$197 million) in two solar module and cell production plants in Singapore or South Korea within two years.
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Solar cells wait for their day in the sun in Australia

April 30th, 2007 by kalyan89 in Press Releases, Reports, PV-General, Solar Energy - general

Tim Colebatch, April 30, 2007
Source: theage.com.au
http://www.theage.com.au/news/business/solar-cells-wait-for-their-day-in-the-sun/2007/04/29/1177787972754.html

AS A solution to global warming, solar energy has everything going for it — except cost. But a new government move and little slivers of silicon invented in Australia might soon change that.  Prime Minister John Howard hinted on Friday that next week’s budget could lift the rebate for Australians to install solar panels for generating electricity — seizing the initiative after Labor’s Kevin Rudd pledged only to keep the rebate at its current level.

And if so, Origin Energy is ready to go. A decade ago it took a punt on the Australian National University’s team of solar energy researchers, and was richly rewarded when they invented sliver cells — a technology that promises to cut the cost of solar panels in half.  ANU researchers Andrew Blakers and Klaus Weber have given cutting-edge technology a literal meaning, with a breakthrough they thought up on a train to Edinburgh in 2000. The biggest cost in solar cells is the silicon wafer. But slice the wafer into 10-centimetre slivers of silicon, array them in a panel, and you could increase the solar energy conversion tenfold.
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$300m for green homes in Australia – Labor offer on solar panels, rain tanks

April 30th, 2007 by kalyan89 in Press Releases, Reports, PV-General, Solar Installations

April 30, 2007
Source:
http://www.bordermail.com.au/news/bm/national/760555.html

HOUSEHOLDS will be able to borrow up to $10,000 to fit their homes with solar panels, rainwater tanks and other green products under a $300 million Labor scheme which could slash greenhouse gas emissions by 15 million tonnes.  Opposition Leader Kevin Rudd outlined the green renovation scheme on the last day of Labor’s national conference yesterday, predicting the initiative would be equivalent to planting 15 million trees or taking four million cars off the road for a year.  Around 200,000 households on up to $250,000 a year will be able to take advantage of the program which will offer loans of up to $10,000, with interest capped at the inflation rate, for green products aimed at making established homes more energy and water efficient.
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Australia’s Alice Springs Goes Solar

April 30th, 2007 by kalyan89 in Press Releases, Reports, PV-General, Solar Installations

ALICE SPRINGS, Northern Territory, Australia, April 18, 2007 (ENS)
Source: Environmental News Service
http://www.ens-newswire.com/ens/apr2007/2007-04-18-04.asp

Alice Springs has been named as Australia’s next Solar City, a designation that enables the tourist town to receive government funding for solar installations. It joins Adelaide, Townsville and Blacktown, which all have signed onto the Solar Cities program within the past year.  With A$12.3 million in funding through the Australian government’s Solar Cities program, the Alice Springs Solar City consortium is working with all sectors to change how people power their homes and businesses.
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Retailer Chain Target starts solar-power rollout

April 30th, 2007 by kalyan89 in Press Releases, Reports, PV-General, Solar Installations

John Vomhof Jr. – Minneapolis / St. Paul Business Journal / April 30, 2007
source: Mlive.com
http://www.mlive.com/business/ambizdaily/bizjournals/index.ssf?/base/abd-3/1177915233122600.xml

Target Corp. is spending millions of dollars to cuts its energy costs and secure a greener image in the process.  The Minneapolis-based retailer has installed solar panels on the roofs of four of its California retail stores and plans to install similar systems at 14 more locations later this year. The solar-panel systems will generate about 20 percent of those stores’ annual energy requirements.
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Solar power comes to poorest India – UN funding plan aims to replace kerosene

Mike Blanchfield, The Ottawa Citizen /April 30, 2007
Source: Canada.com
http://www.canada.com/ottawacitizen/news/story.html?id=9bf3ac4c-2652-45e4-82b1-e64767f1f01f

Cheap, energy-efficient lightbulbs are brightening the lives of 100,000 rural poor in India in a United Nations project touted as an affordable energy solution for the under-developed world.  In a report released yesterday, the UN Energy Program (UNEP) outlined the four-year, $1.5-million Cdn project in which small solar panels were made available to villagers in some of the poorest parts of India, weaning people off their dependency on potentially dangerous, inefficient and environmentally unfriendly kerosene lamps.
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Terrestrial demand drives Emcore’s solar ramp

April 27th, 2007 by kalyan89 in Press Releases, Reports, PV-General, SC Company Reports

27 April 2007
source: Compoundsemiconductor.net
http://compoundsemiconductor.net/articles/news/11/4/28/1

With potential orders for terrestrial solar power systems worth more than $300 million in the pipeline, Emcore is adding two production MOCVD systems at its Albuquerque facility.  Solar cell and fiber-optic component maker Emcore is adding significantly to its chip manufacturing capacity to meet increasing demand for terrestrial solar power systems featuring high-performance compound semiconductors.
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