GermanyÂ’s Schott opens solar facility in U.S.

subscribe

Schott Solar, seeking to capture a big chunk of the U.S. solar market, unveiled a new U.S. facility that will produce both solar thermal and photovoltaic solar components.

The unit of privately held German glassmaker Schott AG said its Albuquerque, New Mexico facility employs 300 workers and will be up to 350 staff by the end of the year.

The plant will produce traditional crystalline-silicon photovoltaic (PV) modules, which transform sunlight into electricity, as well as receivers for solar thermal power plants that convert the sun's heat into energy.

In a solar thermal power plant, the sun's rays heat a fluid housed in a long glass tube called a receiver. The hot fluid is then used to generate steam that turns a turbine.

At first, Scott's plant will be capable of producing between 65 megawatts and 85 MW of PV solar modules annually, though production will not go as high as 85 MW this year, Schott Solar CEO Gerald Fine said in an interview.

Fine added that the company was looking beyond the current economic downturn toward the long-term potential for solar power in the United States.

"If you are going to make an investment in our industry, let's face, it's not for the faint hearted," Fine said. "You have to look a little past the first half of 2009 and think about the medium- and long-term prospects for the industry."

Schott has long produced solar panels at a small facility in Billerica, Massachusetts, Fine said, but the Albuquerque plant is substantially larger, representing a major expansion of the company's U.S. solar business.

The recession and global credit crunch have had a tougher impact on PV solar than on solar thermal, or concentrating solar projects, Fine added, because solar thermal plants have a much longer planning and permitting process.

In addition, many in the industry are in a "wait and see mode" while funds for renewable energy projects from the U.S. economic stimulus are preparing to be allocated.

Less than a quarter of the new Schott plant's photovoltaic modules will be shipped overseas this year, Fine said, while most of the solar thermal components will be used for U.S. projects.

Related News

power lines

Which of the cleaner states imports dirty electricity?

WASHINGTON - In the United States, electricity generation accounts for nearly 30% of our carbon emissions. Some states have responded to that by setting aggressive renewable energy standards; others are hoping to see coal propped up even as its economics get worse. Complicating matters further is the fact that many regional grids are integrated, meaning power generated in one location may be exported and used in a different state entirely.

Tracking these electricity exports is critical for understanding how to lower our national carbon emissions. In addition, power from a dirty source like coal has health and environment impacts where it's…

READ MORE
charts

Four Facts about Covid and U.S. Electricity Consumption

READ MORE

india coal shortage

India to Ration Coal Supplies as Electricity Demand Surges

READ MORE

Ontario election

Clean, affordable electricity should be an issue in the Ontario election

READ MORE

renewable power sources

UN: Renewable Energy Ambition in NDCs must Double by 2030

READ MORE