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4. Companies in the news
4.1
Corporate news
RWE
Solutions AG, Frankfurt/Main, and Schott Glas, Mainz, announced
that they will bring together all their activities in the area
of photovoltaics into a joint undertaking. The new RWE Schott
Solar GmbH, Alzenau, will unite RWE Solar GmbH, Alzenau, its subsidiary
ASE Americas Inc., Billerica/Boston, and the Schott Applied Power
Corporation, Rocklin (USA). Schott will receive business parity
in the joint venture. The joint venture aims to bring together
the technological strengths of RWE Solar with the materials research,
production know-how and global span of Schott. The joint venture
will include development and production of crystalline technologies
(wafer, cells and modules) and thin film production as well as
the worldwide marketing of solar systems.
RWE
Solar, a subsidiary of energy company RWE, employs 550 people.
Sales for the fiscal year ending Jun 30 were 96 million euros
($84 million). Schott's U.S. subsidiary, Schott Applied Power
Corporation, which will be folded into the mix, employs 75 people
and had sales of 20 million euros ($18 million) last year. Shell
Renewables announced in April the conclusion of the acquisition
of all the shares held by Siemens AG and E.ON Energie AG in the
former solar joint venture Siemens and Shell Solar GmBH. Regulatory
approval for closing the transaction had already been received.
Shell
Solar, which is now the fourth largest PV company in the world,
employs around 1100 people. It is headquartered in Amsterdam and
has PV manufacturing facilities with a total yearly capacity of
some 60MW of solar panels including:
·
Ingot growing and wafering in Vancouver, Washington, USA
· Monocrystalline cells and modules in Camarillo, California,
USA
· Multicrystalline cells and modules in Helmond, the Netherlands,
and multi crystalline cells at its factory in Gelsenkirchen, Germany,
where a second cell production line is being planned and will
become operational in 2003.
Shell
Solar plans to focus on developing PV solutions for two distinct
market segments: · Grid-Connected Solar Systems: starting from
400 Watt systems to 1 Megawatt and above, depending on individual
projects.
This
activity covers installation, maintenance and financing in areas
where an electricity network is present.
·
Off-Grid Solar Electrification: bringing solar PV to end-users
in remote areas, and solar powered solutions for remote industrial
applications. This includes training, maintenance and all other
after-sales activities.
Meanwhile,
Siemens (Shell) Solar and Powerlight Corporation have formed a
strategic alliance to manufacture the PowerGuard System in Los
Angeles, California. Under the new agreement, Siemens Solar and
PowerLight have established a specialized manufacturing line at
a Siemens Solar's module manufacturing facility in Chatsworth,
California. The line is capable of manufacturing up to 6 Megawatts
(and can be expanded to 15-20 Megawatts) of solar electric roof
tiles per year, primarily for use in Los Angeles' commercial,
industrial, and government facilities.
The
PowerGuard® roof tiles will incorporate Siemens' high efficiency
single crystal silicon cells.
Sharp
Corporation announced in May 2002 its entry into United States
market. This follows the emergence of the United States as the
latest country, after Japan and Germany, to establish a material
solar market based upon grid-tied applications.
The
Huntington Beach, California base, already a major distribution
center for Sharp in the United States, will have responsibility
for both the North and South American PV markets. Initial market
focus will be on the United States, however. Sharp expects to
achieve a double-digit share of the market within 12 months of
operation. This equates to around 5 Megawatts of product.
Sharp
marketed over 70 Megawatts of PV products worldwide in 2001 and
estimates that it has a market share approaching 45% in Japan
and 19% worldwide. While most PV manufacturers in the US market
have seen their largest grid-tied demand come from large commercial
projects, it is clear that Sharp will also bring a greater emphasis
on residential applications. This is a characteristic of the Japanese
market, the biggest in the world.
Sharp
will initially market five solar module types: 80 Watt, 123 Watt,
125 Watt, 160 Watt and 165 Watt.
Meanwhile,
in Japan, Sharp has announced that it will increase the number
of workers at its solar cell division by 20 percent and aims to
boost revenue there by 55% to 49 billion yen in the current financial
year to Mar 2003, when production capacity is slated to be 200
MW. SolarWorld AG announced that it had secured the remaining
minority shareholding in Gällivare Photovoltaik AB (GPV), the
Swedish solar module manufacturer.
SolarWorld
thereby increased its share from 96.3% to 100%. The solar module
manufacturer will now be fully integrated into SolarWorld. SolarWorld
purchased 25% of GPV from BP Solar in September last year.
GPV
has been responsible for the Scandinavian business of SolarWorld
since Jan 1, 2002. SolarWorld expects annual turnover to grow
by 25 percent this year and it plans a share issue to fund an
increase in production capacity. The additional capital will be
used in the construction and expansion of its integrated Deutsche
Solar factory in Freiberg, Saxony.
Deutsche
Solar AG has entered into new long-term agreements on the supply
of solar silicon wafers with the international solar cell industry.
The contracts are all typically in excess of one-year duration
and are mostly for multicrystalline wafers. Contract partners
of Deutsche Solar are said to include, with few exceptions, all
the leading solar cell manufacturers worldwide.
Sunways
AG, the German manufacturer of multi-crystalline silicon solar
cells, entered two new agreements for cell supply in 2002.
The
Swedish module assembler Sun Peak AB will purchase cells with
a value of 4.4 million euros by 2004. Approximately two-thirds
of these cells will be delivered in 2002. Phönix SonnenStrom AG
secured 6 Megawatts of PV module supplies through agreements that
will guarantee secure supplies at attractive prices 2002. The
product has been secured from Siemens & Shell Solar, RWE Solar
(formerly ASE) and Eurosolare. Phönix SonnenStrom was also awarded
EU contracts worth 15.7 million euro this quarter.
Among
other activities, seven project partners will be installing 1.15
MW of PV. Phönix SonnenStrom AG has also acquired 100% of Sol
AG, a solar project development company also based in Sulzemoos,
near Munich. Sol AG, formed in October 1998, has grown its business
by creating power projects that utilize the security of solar
electricity sales under the terms of the German Renewable Energy
Act. They proactively seek opportunities for the installation
of large solar systems and bring together investors to fund the
projects. The company has completed around ten projects in the
last two years, all in the range of twenty to fifty kilowatts.
S.A.G.
Solarstrom is taking over the Sunlive Solar franchise network
of installers. It will give SAG Solarstrom a national installer
network and the ability to offer its product range of residential
systems and power plants for communities and companies to a broader
market. The company has also announced a new solar energy investment
venture called One World - One Energy AG. The purpose of One World
- One Energy AG is to provide a financing vehicle for the worldwide
development of renewable energy, and in particular, solar energy.
The
conditions for investments by One World - One Energy are securing
a planned minimum net yield of 8%, establishing plants in politically
stable locations and including a minimum component of 50% solar
energy. It is anticipated that the yield passed on to investors
will be 6%. The founders of One World - One Energy AG, S.A.G.
Solarstrom and Powerlight Corporation, will each put in 50,000
euros of initial capital. Swiss Remaco Merger AG will act as Investment
Manager and is also on the Supervisory Board.
One
World - One Energy AG plans to increase its capital this summer.
The goal is to secure 20 million euros of capital in June 2002,
which is expected to be placed mainly in German speaking countries.
The business model is based among other things upon a study by
the Deutschen Bank last year, which points out that future developed
world markets for renewable energy can be created by innovative
financing approaches. However, the joint venture does not rule
out consideration of developing world locations too.
The
initial focus, though, will be in OECD countries and the first
projects are expected to be in Germany and United States. A project
with Afrisol in Morocco is also expected to be under early consideration.
Solon
AG's 2001 module production rose steadily from 703 kW in the first
quarter to 1.426 MW in the fourth quarter, achieving an annual
production output of 4.2 MW. Expansion of capacity to 20 MW by
end of 2002 is underway and is hoped to position the company to
achieve its 2002 goal of more than 10 MW of module production.
Having posted a loss of around 6.1 million euros last year, Solon
AG expects to be back in the black in 2002.
Solar
Fabrik, a large privately owned solar module producer in Germany,
is converting to a publicly listed company to enable it to raise
capital to fund expansion. Its module production increased to
6.1 MW in 2001 (from 4.6 MW in 2000), an increase of 45%. Sales
revenues climbed to 29 million euros from 20 million euros the
previous year. The company placed two orders for solar cells this
quarter. The first order is with US manufacturer Astropower for
5 Megawatts and the second order is with RWE Solutions GmbH for
4.5 Megawatts.
Thai
Photovoltaics Ltd. (TPV) recently opened Phase II of its direct
private equity placement in which the company intends to sell
an additional thirty percent of its equity for US$5,064,000.
In
the USA, EcoEnergies announced a Distribution Agreement with PowerLight
to furnish PowerGuard solar electric roof top systems. Last year,
EcoEnergies completed a 220 kilowatt installation for PowerLight
near Fountain Valley in Southern California, and is currently
completing a project near San Jose. AstroPower, Inc, announced
that its Board of Directors approved a three-for-two split of
its common stock to be effected in the form of a 50% stock dividend.
GT
Equipment Technologies, Inc, corporate parent of GT Solar, a supplier
of solar photovoltaic manufacturing systems, has secured investment
capital of $5 million from the Energy Fund of RBC Capital Partners,
the private equity group of Royal Bank of Canada.
Global
Solar, which is starting to manufacture copper indium diselenide
thin-film photovoltaic cells, expects to have revenues of $14
million this year as production ramps up.
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