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Photovoltaic Solar Energy Futures

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Title: Photovoltaic Solar Energy Futures


1
Photovoltaic Solar EnergyFutures
  • Presented to the
  • Minnesota Futurists
  • 16 May 2009
  • Dick Saunders and David Keenan

2
But first a word from our sponsor
  • The Futurist Tool
  • of the day
  • Trend Analysis and Extrapolation

3
Trend Analysis Extrapolation
  • A Method Everyone Uses
  • Trend analysis involves the use of any of a
    variety of techniques based on historical data.
  • Trend analysis involves several processes. One
    process is spotting an emerging trend, that is,
    identifying a change in the world around us.
  • Now you need to do some analysis to see what the
    nature of the trend is and what its implications
    might be.
  • You could first look at historical data

http//crab.rutgers.edu/goertzel/futuristmethods.
htm
4
Trend Analysis Extrapolation
5
Trend Analysis Extrapolation
  • Trend analysis requires that you do more than
    simply extrapolate the trend forward.
  • You have to ask, what is causing this trend, and
    will those causes continue indefinitely?
  • Are there upper limits to the trend?
  • What other forces may affect the trend?
  • At this point trend analysis relies more on
    subjective judgment rather than objective
    extrapolation of historical data.
  • Assuming that the future will be like the past or
    that past changes will continue in the same
    direction and rate is a perfectly sensible way to
    begin trying to understand the future.
  • It can not, however, be the end of our endeavors,
    or we would end up with absurd results.

http//crab.rutgers.edu/goertzel/futuristmethods.
htm
6
Trends to Analyze in This Talk
  • Solar Cells
  • Market size
  • Market share
  • Sales
  • Units
  • Power produced
  • Cost per power delivered

7
Agenda
  • The Sun
  • Solar Cells
  • Background
  • How they work
  • Types
  • Markets
  • Costs
  • Countries
  • Companies
  • Questions

8
Now on with the show
9
Energy from the Sun
  • About half the incoming solar energy reaches the
    Earth's surface.
  • The Earth receives 174 petawatts (PW) (1015
    watts) of incoming solar radiation at the upper
    atmosphere. Approximately 30 is reflected back
    to space while the rest is absorbed by clouds,
    oceans and land masses.
  • Earth's land surface, oceans and atmosphere
    absorb solar radiation, and this raises their
    temperature. Sunlight absorbed by the oceans and
    land masses keeps the surface at an average
    temperature of 14 C.
  • By photosynthesis green plants convert solar
    energy into chemical energy, which produces food,
    wood and the biomass from which fossil fuels are
    derived.

http//en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Solar_energy
10
Breakdown of incoming solar energy
http//en.wikipedia.org/wiki/FileBreakdown_of_the
_incoming_solar_energy.svg
11
Energy from the Sun
  • Yearly Solar fluxes Human Energy Consumption
  • The total solar energy absorbed by Earth's
    atmosphere, oceans and land masses is
    approximately 3,850,000 exajoules (EJ) (1018
    joules) per year. (70 of incoming sunlight)

    (1 Joule energy required to
    heat one gram of dry, cool air by 1 C)
  • Primary energy use (2005) 487 EJ (0.0126)
  • Electricity (2005) 56.7 EJ (0.0015) Therefore
    a good target
  • 2002, more energy in one hour than the world used
    in the year.
  • Photosynthesis captures approximately 3,000 EJ
    per year in biomass.
  • The amount of solar energy reaching the surface
    of the planet is so vast that in one year it is
    about twice as much as will ever be obtained from
    all of the Earth's non-renewable resources of
    coal, oil, natural gas, and mined uranium
    combined.
  • As intermittent resources, solar and wind raise
    issues.

http//en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Solar_energy
12
Solar Cells Background
  • 1839 - French physicist A. E. Becquerel first
    recognized the photovoltaic effect.
  • Photovoltaic convert light to electricity
  • 1883 - first solar cell built, by Charles Fritts,
    coated semiconductor selenium with an extremely
    thin layer of gold to form the junctions.
  • 1954 - Bell Laboratories, experimenting with
    semiconductors, accidentally found that silicon
    doped with certain impurities was very sensitive
    to light. Daryl Chapin, Calvin Fuller and Gerald
    Pearson, invented the first practical device for
    converting sunlight into useful electrical power.
    Resulted in the production of the first practical
    solar cells with a sunlight energy conversion
    efficiency of around 6.
  • 1958 - First spacecraft to use solar panels was
    US satellite Vanguard 1

http//en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Solar_cell
13
PV Solar for Electricity
  • Photovoltaics
  • For the 2 billion people without access to
    electricity, it would be cheaper to install solar
    panels than to extend the electrical grid. (The
    Fund for Renewable Energy Everywhere)
  • Providing power for villages in developing
    countries is a fast-growing market for
    photovoltaics. The United Nations estimates that
    more than 2 million villages worldwide are
    without electric power for water supply,
    refrigeration, lighting, and other basic needs,
    and the cost of extending the utility grids is
    prohibitive, 23,000 to 46,000 per kilometer in
    1988.
  • A one kilowatt PV system each month
  • prevents 150 lbs. of coal from being mined
  • prevents 300 lbs. of CO2 from entering the
    atmosphere
  • keeps 105 gallons of water from being consumed
  • keeps NO and SO2 from being released into the
    environment
  • in Colorado, or an equivalent system that
    produces 150 kWh per month

http//www.solarenergy.org/resources/energyfacts.h
tml
14
How Solar Cells Work
  • Photons in sunlight hit the

    solar panel and are absorbed

    by
    semiconducting materials,

    such as silicon.
  • Electrons (negatively charged)

    are knocked
    loose from their

    atoms, allowing them to flow

    through the
    material to

    produce electricity.
  • An array of solar cells

    converts solar energy
    into a

    usable amount of

    direct current (DC)
    electricity.

http//en.wikipedia.org/wiki/FileSilicon_Solar_ce
ll_structure_and_mechanism.svg
15
Solar Cells Background
  • Three generations of solar cells
  • Solar Cells are classified into three generations
    which indicates the order of which each became
    important.
  • At present there is concurrent research into all
    three generations while the first generation
    technologies are most highly represented in
    commercial production, accounting for 89.6 of
    2007 production.

http//en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Solar_cell
16
Solar Cells Background
  • First Generation Single Junction Silicon Cells
  • 89.6 of 2007 Production
  • 45.2 Single Crystal Si
  • 42.2 Multi-crystal SI
  • Large-area, high quality and

    single junction devices.
  • High energy and labor inputs which

    limit significant progress in reducing

    production costs.
  • Single junction silicon devices are

    approaching theoretical limit efficiency

    of 33. Achieve cost parity with fossil
    fuel
    energy generation after a payback period

    of 57 years. (3.5 yr in Europe)
  • Single crystal silicon - 16-19 efficiency
  • Multi-crystal silicon - 14-15 efficiency

Silicon Cell Average Efficiency
http//en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Solar_cell and
www.epia.org Solar Generation V Report Sept 08
17
Solar Cells Background
  • Second Generation Thin Film Cells
  • CdTe 4.7 CIGS 0.5 of 2007 Production
  • New materials and processes to improve efficiency
    and reduce cost.
  • As manufacturing techniques evolve, production
    costs will be dominated by constituent material
    requirements, whether this be a silicon
    substrate, or glass cover. Thin film cells use
    about 1 of the expensive semiconductors compared
    to First Generation cells.
  • The most successful second generation materials
    have been cadmium telluride (CdTe), copper indium
    gallium selenide (CIGS), amorphous silicon and
    micromorphous silicon.
  • Trend toward second gen., but commercialization
    has proven difficult.
  • 2007 - First Solar produced 200 MW of CdTe solar
    cells, 5th largest producer in 2007 and the
    first to reach top 10 from of second generation
    technologies alone.
  • 2007 - Wurth Solar commercialized its CIGS
    technology producing 15 MW.
  • 2007 - Nanosolar commercialized its CIGS
    technology in 2007 with a production .
    capacity of 430 MW for 2008 in the USA and
    Germany.
  • 2008 - Honda began to commercialize their CIGS
    base solar panel.
  • CdTe 8 11 efficiency (18 demonstrated)
  • CIGS 7-11 efficiency (20 demonstrated)
  • Payback time lt 1 year in Europe

http//en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Solar_cell and
www.epia.org Solar Generation V Report Sept 08
18
Solar Cells Background
  • Third Generation Multi-junction Cells
  • Third generation technologies aim to enhance poor
    electrical performance of second generation
    (thin-film technologies) while maintaining very
    low production costs.
  • Current research is targeting conversion
    efficiencies of 30-60 while retaining low cost
    materials and manufacturing techniques. They can
    exceed the theoretical solar conversion
    efficiency limit for a single energy threshold
    material, 31 under 1 sun illumination and 40.8
    under the maximal artificial concentration of
    sunlight (46,200 suns).
  • Approaches to achieving these high efficiencies
    including the use of multijunction photovoltaic
    cells, concentration of the incident spectrum,
    the use of thermal generation by UV light to
    enhance voltage or carrier collection, or the use
    of the infrared spectrum for night-time
    operation.
  • Typically use fresnel lens (3M) or other
    concentrators, but cannot use diffuse sunlight
    and require sun tracking hardware
  • Multi-junction cells 30 efficiency (40-43
    demonstrated)

http//en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Solar_cell and
www.epia.org Solar Generation V Report Sept 08
19
Global Cumulative PV Power
http//www.epia.org/fileadmin/EPIA_docs/publicatio
ns/epia/Global_Market_Outlook_Until_2013.pdf
20
Global Annual PV Market
http//www.epia.org/fileadmin/EPIA_docs/publicatio
ns/epia/Global_Market_Outlook_Until_2013.pdf
21
Solar Cell Market Estimate
-- First Generation -- -- Second
Generation -- - Third Gen -
SEMI PV Group March 2009 from source Yole
Development
22
Global Annual PV Market Outlook
http//www.epia.org/fileadmin/EPIA_docs/publicatio
ns/epia/Global_Market_Outlook_Until_2013.pdf
23
Solar PV Market Outlook
by 2030 8.9 of Global Energy, 1,864 GW
Production Capacity, 2,646 TWh Electricity
SEMI PV Group March 2009 from source EPIA Solar
Generation V Sept 08 www.epia.org
24
Cost Projections
/kWh
Grid parity where PV cost are equal to
residential electricity costs is expected to be
achieved first in southern European countries and
then to move north
1.35
1.07
0.81
0.54
0.27
0.13 ---
www.epia.org EPIA Solar Generation V Report Sept
08
25
Cumulative installed solar electric power by 2007
  • 1st Germany 3.8 GW
  • 2nd Japan 1.9 GW
  • 3rd US 814 MW
  • 4th Spain 632 MW

26
World's largest photovoltaic (PV) power plants
(12 MW or larger)
1
http//en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Photovoltaic_power_st
ations
27
Large systems in planning or under construction
Under construction Proposed
http//en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Photovoltaic_power_st
ations
28
Spain
  • Blessed with almost year-round sunshine, Spain's
    socialist government is trying to capitalize on
    this natural resource.
  • In an effort to encourage private individuals and
    companies to install solar power, Spain
    introduced subsidies of 0.42 per kilowatt per
    hour (0.57/KWhr) (feed-in tariff and off-grid
    subsidies)
  • But the Spanish government is considering
    reducing this subsidy in September, a move which
    is likely to face opposition from within the
    solar energy industry.
  • 2007 26,800 employees in Spanish solar companies

http//www.guardian.co.uk/environment/2008/jul/09/
solarpower.renewableenergy 9 July 2008
www.epia.org Solar Generation V Report Sep 2008
29
Olmedilla Solar Park
60 MWp photovoltaic park installed by Nobesol
with modules from Silikin
http//www.siliken.com/clientes_proyectos/instalac
iones/ficha?contentId572
30
Germany
  • 10,000 companies, including installers work in
    solar PV
  • 80 companies are cell and module makers
  • 42,000 employees
  • Sales were 5.7 B including 2.5 B in exports
  • The feed-in tariff
  • 2008 German utilities pay 0.47 to 0.68/kWh
    depending on type and size of system for new
    solar systems
  • Utilities pass cost to consumers Germany
    average is 1.65/month

www.epia.org Solar Generation V Report Sep 2008
31
Waldpolenz Solar Park
  • The Waldpolenz Solar Park is built on a surface
    area equivalent to 200 soccer fields, the solar
    park will be capable of feeding 40 megawatts into
    the power grid when fully operational in 2009.
  • In the start-up phase, the 130-million-euro (201
    million) plant it will have a capacity of 24
    megawatts, according to the Juwi group, which
    operates the installation.
  •  
  • The facility, located east of Leipzig, uses
    state-of-the-art, thin-film technology. Some
    550,000 thin-film modules will be used, of which
    350,000 have already been installed. The direct
    current produced in the PV solar modules will be
    converted into alternating current and fed
    completely into the power grid.
  • After just a year the solar power station will
    have produced the energy needed to build it,
    according to the Juwi group.

http//www.dw-world.de/dw/article/0,2144,3430319,0
0.html
32
Waldpolenz Solar Park
http//www.dw-world.de/dw/article/0,2144,3430319,0
0.html
33
Waldpolenz Solar Park
http//lumbergusa.com/main/Bild/sp_pv_07/Brandis-W
aldpolenz-Fotomont.jpg
34
United States
  • 2007 - PV production grew in all areas of US
    market
  • US leads development of thin-film technology
    accounting for nearly half the global production
  • 2007 about 50,000 employees
  • CA dominates with 60 of installed capacity
  • Various state Renewable Portfolio Standards (RPS)
    and Federal Investment Tax Credits (ITC) are
    incentives.
  • Solar America Initiative making progress on goal
    to bring PV costs to grid parity by 2015

www.epia.org Solar Generation V Report Sep 2008
35
Renewable Energy Consumption in the US Energy
Supply, 2007
http//www.eia.doe.gov/cneaf/solar.renewables/page
/trends/highlight1.html
36
Chart Data
http//www.eia.doe.gov/cneaf/solar.renewables/page
/trends/figure1_1.xls
37
US Solar Industry Data
Solar energy represents less than 1 of the U.S.
energy mix. However, as a result of growing
awareness about reliable, off-the-shelf
technology, concerns about rising costs, energy
security and supplies, and new state and federal
incentives, deployment of solar energy has
exploded since 2005.
  • Size of U.S. Market2008 - U.S. had about 8,800
    megawatts (MW) of installed solar capacity.
  • 1,100 MW of photovoltaics (PV),
  • 418 MW of utility-scale concentrating
    solar power,
  • 485 MWTh (megawatts thermal equivalent) of
    solar water heating systems
  • 7,000 MWTh of solar pool heating systems.
  • Ranking of U.S. Market Cumulative installed
    solar electric power by 2007. 1st Germany
    3.8 GW, 2nd Japan 1.9 GW, 3rd US 814 MW, 4th
    Spain 632 MW
  • Growth of U.S. Market 2008 - more than 18,000
    individual PV systems were installed. Totaled 342
    MW 292 MW was grid-connected.
  • Growth of U.S. Manufacturing 2008 domestic PV
    cell manufacturing capacity grew 65 percent to
    685 MW and production grew 53 percent to 414 MW.
    (Results preliminary) (Source Greentech Media
    Research and the Prometheus Institute)

www.seia.org/cs/about_solar_energy/industry_data
and www.epia.org Solar Generation V Report Sep
2008
38
Nellis AFB Solar panels
http//en.wikipedia.org/wiki/FileNellis_AFB_Solar
_panels.jpg
39
GM installs world's biggest rooftop solar
panels
  • The largest rooftop solar power station in the
    world is being built in Spain. With a capacity of
    12 MW of power, the station is made up of 85,000
    lightweight panels covering an area of two
    million SqFt.
  • Manufactured in rolls, rather like carpet, the
    photovoltaic panels are to be installed on the
    roof of a General Motors car factory in Zaragoza,
    Spain.
  • General Motors, which plans to install solar
    panels at another 11 plants across Europe,
    unveiled the 50M (68M) project yesterday. The
    power station should be producing energy by
    September.
  • The panels will produce an expected annual output
    of 15.1 million kilowatt hours (kWh) - enough to
    meet the needs of 4,600 households with an
    average consumption of 3,300kWh, or power a third
    of the GM factory. The solar energy produced
    should cut CO2 emissions by 6,700 tons a year.
  • Energy Conversion Devices who makes the panels,
    said it would be the largest rooftop solar array
    in the world.

http//www.guardian.co.uk/environment/2008/jul/09/
solarpower.renewableenergy 9 July 2008
40
GM installs world's biggest rooftop solar
panels
http//www.guardian.co.uk/environment/2008/jul/09/
solarpower.renewableenergy 9 July 2008
41
Japan
  • 2002 - Basic Act on Energy Policy to secure
    stable energy supply, environmental suitability
    and use of market mechanisms
  • By 2006, installed 1.2 GW for 350,000 homes
  • 2008 New research initiative to improve yields
    from 10-15 to 40 and reduce cost from 0.48/kWh
    to 0.073/kWh

www.epia.org Solar Generation V Report Sep 2008
42
China
  • 2007
  • National Renewable Energy targets
  • 10 by 2010 (300 MW)
  • 15 by 2020 (1.8 GW)
  • Supplies 1,130 tons of polysilicon from 6
    companies
  • Supplies 21,400 tons of silicon ingot from 70
    companies
  • Number 1 PV panel producer 1.1 GW
  • 50 PV panel companies including Suntech, Yingli,
    Hebei Jingao, Jiansu Linyang, and Nangjing CEEG
  • 82,800 employees (6 times that of 2005)

www.epia.org Solar Generation V Report Sep 2008
43
Top 10 PV Cell Producers
Until recently BP Solar was dominant
supplier. New Top 10 produce 53
of world total Q-Cells, SolarWorld -
Germany Sharp, Kyocera, Sharp, Sanyo
Japan Suntech, Yingli, JA Solar China Motech
- Taiwan
44
BP Solar
  • BP Solar to supply PV power systems for Wal-Mart
    in CA 22 April 2009
  • Under a power purchase agreement (PPA), BP will
    finance, install and maintain the systems and
    Wal-Mart will have immediate access to clean
    electricity with no up front capital cost to the
    retailer.
  • Will initially build 10 to 20 rooftop systems at
    Wal-Mart locations in California, and would work
    with the retailer to evaluate the potential for
    additional projects. Expects to complete the
    first set, 10 MW of installed solar power, within
    about 18 months.
  • 2008 BP completed 4.1 MW solar systems for 7
    Wal-Marts Sams Clubs in CA.
  • Since 1998, BP guarantees its modules for 25
    years.
  • BP Solar, part of BP Alternative Energy, is a
    global company with about 2000 employees. With
    over 35 years of experience and installations in
    most countries, BP Solar is one of the world's
    leading solar companies.
  • BP is one of the worlds largest energy
    companies, in more than 100 countries and over
    96,000 employees.

http//www.bp.com/sectiongenericarticle.do?categor
yId9025044contentId7046577
45
BP axes 620 jobs from solar business
  • 01 April, 2009 - BP to axe 620 jobs from its
    solar power business more than a quarter of
    that workforce in a move it said was part of
    the long-term strategy to "reduce the cost of
    solar power to that of conventional electricity.
  • Two cell manufacture and module assembly plants
    near Madrid, will be shut with the loss of 480
    posts while module assembly will also be phased
    out at its Frederick facility in Maryland, US,
    with a further 140 redundancies.
  • BP blamed the cutbacks on the credit crunch and
    lower-cost competition saying its global
    manufacturing capacity would still increase
    during this year and next via a series of
    strategic alliances with other companies.

http//www.guardian.co.uk/environment/2009/apr/01/
bp-solar
46
Q Cells SE
  • 1999 founded, 2001 began with the production of
    silicon solar cells with 19 employees.
  • By 2009, 2,600 employees (2007, 1700 employees)
  • Now the largest solar cell manufacturer in the
    world. (since 2007)
  • Continue to expand production in
    Bitterfeld-Wolfen, Germany and start
    construction of new Malaysian production
    facility.
  • Alongside the monocrystalline and polycrystalline
    (90 of business) core business, we use a wide
    range of technologies to develop and produce
    thin-film modules. (thin-film - 25 share of
    smaller market)
  • 2008 Sales 1.69 B 2007 Sales 1.16 B
    profitable
  • QCE Frankfurt exchange

http//www.q-cells.com/en and http//www.google.co
m/finance?qFRA3AQCE
47
Sharp Solar
  • Subsidiary of Sharp Electronics, Osaka, Japan
  • Produces silicon solar cells and thin film,
    leveraging silicon knowledge from LCD
    manufacturing
  • 2008, capacity will reach 1.6 million square
    meters of thin-film modules, as we simultaneously
    build the world's largest thin film manufacturing
    complex, capable of 10 million square meters per
    year. And this gigawatt-scale factory is only the
    first to come. Katsuga City, Nara and Sakai City,
    Osaka, Japan
  • Thin film efficiency 9, expecting 10 from GW
    factory line.
  • Sharp powers more homes and businesses than any
    other solar mfg in the world. First mfgr to
    reach 2 GW cumulative production since mass
    production start in 1963
  • Memphis, TN 100 MW manufacturing facility

http//solar.sharpusa.com/solar/solar_thin_film/1,
,3-6,00.html and http//www.sharpusa.com/files/sol
_dow_ThinFilm_101408.pdf
48
SunTech Power
  • BEIJING, Jan 12, 2009 (Xinhua via COMTEX)
  • Chinas solar product maker SunTech Power
    Holdings Co., Ltd. (STP.NYSE) recently laid off
    800 workers or 10 percent of its total employees
    and postponed its previous plan on recruiting
    2,000 people, said Shi Zhengrong, chairman and
    CEO.
  • SunTech delayed plan to expand production
    capacity to 1.5 GW in 2009, which requires 2,000
    more employees.
  • Plants in Wuxi and other areas are in normal
    operation with more than 50 capacity running,
    compared with 85 prior to financial meltdown.
  • SunTech has received more than 800 MW of orders
    in 2009 including 650 MW from Europe. 2008
    overall orders of 500 MW.

http//www.tradingmarkets.com/.site/news/Stock20N
ews/2119252/
49
SunTech Power
  • Sales 1.9B 2008, 1.3B 2007 profitable
  • Employees 6784
  • STPNYSE
  • Wuxi, China
  • Worlds largest silicon cell maker
  • Average conversion efficiency rates of their
    monocrystalline and multicrystalline silicon PV
    cells 16.4 and 14.9 respectively
  • 10 May 2009 announces plan to build manufacturing
    plant in US, now shopping states for incentives

http//www.google.com/finance?qNYSESTP
50
Kyocera Solar
  • US Solar Division Scottsdale, AZ
  • Subsidiary of Kyocera, Kyoto, Japan (KYONYSE)
    13B 2008
  • 2008 broke ground for new plant in Tianjin City,
    China to expand there from 60 MW to 240 MW by
    2011. First one in China 03
  • 2012 total production capacity to be 650 MW from
    Japan, Mexico, the Czech Republic and Tianjin.
  • Technology built on knowledge of fine ceramics,
    with metals, plastics, and electronics developed
    for copiers and printers

http//www.kyocerasolar.com/about/
51
First Solar
  • TEMPE, Ariz.--(BUSINESS WIRE)--Feb. 24, 2009--
    First Solar, Inc. (Nasdaq FSLR) today announced
    it reduced its manufacturing cost for solar
    modules in the fourth quarter to 98 cents per
    watt, breaking the 1 per watt price barrier.
  • 2004 Began full commercial operation.
    Manufacturing capacity has grown to more than 500
    MW in 2008 and will double in 2009 to more than 1
    GW, the equivalent of an average-sized nuclear
    power plant.
  • Escalating volumes accompanied by a rapid
    reduction in manufacturing costs. Manufacturing
    costs have declined from over 3 per watt to less
    than 1 per watt. Further significant cost
    reductions are possible.
  • First Solar has industrys first and only
    comprehensive pre-funded, end-of-life module
    collection and recycling program, recycling more
    than 90 of each collected module into new
    products. (A serious issue due to
    Cadmium-Telluride)
  • High throughput, automated lines that integrate
    each production step, from CdTe semiconductor
    deposition to final assembly and test, in one
    continuous process. This advanced manufacturing
    process transforms a piece of glass into a
    complete solar module in less than 2.5 hours.

www.firstsolar.com/
52
First Solar
  • Sales 1.2B 2008, 504M 2007, profitable
  • Employees 3524
  • Tempe, AZ
  • FSLRNASDAQ

finance.google.com
53
Motech Industries
  • Modern Technology for a Sustainable World
  • Founded 1981, Motech Solar started 1997
  • 2003 Publicly trades 6244 Taiwan Exchange
  • 2008 8th largest manufacturer 272 MW crystalline
    and multi-crystal silicon solar cells
  • Plants in Tianan,Taiwan and Kunshan, China
  • 2008 Sales 691M, profitable
  • 1,331 employees

www.motech.com.tw
54
Shell dumps wind, solar and hydro power in favor
of biofuels
  • Shell will no longer invest in renewable
    technologies such as wind, solar and hydro power
    because they are not economic, the Anglo-Dutch
    oil company said today. 17 Mar 09
  • Sold US operations to SolarWorld - Germany

http//www.guardian.co.uk/business/2009/mar/17/roy
aldutchshell-energy
55
SolarWorld AG
  • SWV Frankfurt exchange
  • 1,825 employees
  • Bonn, Germany with production in Freiborg and
    Sweden
  • 2006 acquired assets from Shell Solar which had
    been largest US solar products maker (fka Arco
    Solar and Siemens Solar)
  • Camarillo, CA and Vancouver, WA
  • 2007 acquired Komatsu silicon wafer production
    facility Hillsboro, OR
  • Single and multi-crystalline silicon cells

http//www.google.com/finance?qFRASWV
56
Sun Power
  • Founded 1985, purchased by Cypress Semiconductor
    in 2004, spun out in 2008. SPWRA and SPWRB NASDAQ
  • HQs in San Jose and Geneva, Switzerland
  • 12 polysilicon solar cell line in Philippines
    with capacity 314 MW/yr
  • Expansion plan for 1 GW capacity by 2010
  • High efficiency cells 21-23
  • PGE plans 250 MW facility in CA by 2012
  • FPL DeSoto Cty 35 MW facility due to open 2009
  • Nellis 14 MW facility on line
  • Sales 1.4B for 2008, 775M for 2007 profitable
  • Employees 5,400

http//us.sunpowercorp.com/utility/
57
SunPower Solar Cell
http//us.sunpowercorp.com/utility/why-sunpower/be
st-technology/
58
Energy Conversion Devices / United Solar
Ovonics
  • ENERNASDAQ
  • Rochester Hills, MI
  • Amorphous silicon thin film process on stainless
    steel
  • Over 20 years, manufacturing capacity increased
    from 500 KW to 25 MW/yr
  • Now 3 miles/day
  • Sales 255M for 2008, 114M for 2007, slight
    profit 2008
  • Employees 1090

http//www.uni-solar.com
59
Ovonics Roll-roll Process
http//www.uni-solar.com/uploadedFiles/Uni-SolarTe
chnologyandManufacturingProcessAppendix.pdf
60
Silikin
  • Since 2001, SILIKEN has obtained a significant
    share on the Spanish PV market and has installed
    more than 160 MW of solar PV energy, 240 GWh,
    the electricity consumption of more than 63,595
    homes.
  • Number of employees Currently 700
    people.Valencia, Tenerife and Albacete, Spain
    and San Diego, CA
  • Sales 152 million (207 million) in 2007.
  • Peak power manufactured has become one of the
    main manufacturers of PV modules, supplying 92 MW
    to the market in 08.

http//www.siliken.com/quienes/historia?languageId
1
61
Some Questions
  • Will peak minerals (rising cost due to limits
    in availability) limit growth of thin film and
    third generation solar cells?
  • Will demand growth in China and India limit
    growth in US?
  • How about the impact of other national / regional
    subsidies?
  • How will financial meltdown impact solar cell
    business?
  • What competing technologies would upset the solar
    industry?
  • How will cost and efficiency of 2nd and 3rd
    generation solar cells impact the businesses
    built on 1st generation technology?
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