Morgan Solar earns APPrO accolade

TORONTO, ONTARIO - Toronto-based solar energy start-up Morgan Solar Inc. was awarded the inaugural Canadian Energy Innovation Award CEIA for its pioneering collaboration with the University of Ottawa SUNLab.

The award was presented jointly by Ontario Centres of Excellence OCE, Borden Ladner Gervais LLP BLG and the Association of Power Producers of Ontario APPrO. A panel of industry experts from the Ontario electricity sector selected Morgan Solar in part because the solar energy technology it is developing holds the promise of being broadly applied in Ontario and around the world.

Morgan Solar was selected for its work on optimizing and accelerating the time to market of the company's Sun Simba, a groundbreaking concentrating solar panel. Based on Morgan Solar's patent-pending Light-guide Solar Optic LSO technology, the Sun Simba promises to be the first cost effective solar panel to leverage the significant efficiency improvements of high-efficiency solar cells. The result is a solar panel that achieves one of the industry's highest reported sunlight to electricity conversions in the most compact, low-cost form to date. The University of Ottawa's SUNLab is the only university lab in Canada dedicated to researching high-efficiency solar cell designs for such systems.

"Morgan Solar is another excellent example of the kind of innovation that has its roots in our academic institutions and is nurtured by industry to grow into a success story with tremendous commercial potential," said Dr. Tom Corr, President and CEO of Ontario Centres of Excellence. "It was that spirit of partnership, in this case with the uOttawa University of Ottawa SUNlab, which really won the panel over in selecting Morgan Solar for this award."

"We set ourselves the ambitious goal of making solar energy competitive with other electrical generation technologies," said Nicolas Morgan, VP of Business Development at Morgan Solar. "Winning the Canadian Energy Innovation Award with our partner Dr. Karin Hinzer at the uOttawa SUNLab is not only an honour, but also validates our work. It also recognizes the enthusiasm, support, and talent that we've been able to tap into here in Ontario, which has brought us much closer to achieving our goal of bringing to market a game-changing energy technology."

The challenge for Morgan Solar of taking this new technology from the lab to mass production has been significant, but the company has made enormous progress, in large part due to the guidance and validation provided by the uOttawa SUNLab. The partnership, begun in early 2009, has significantly accelerated the time-to-market of Morgan Solar's Sun Simba technology. It has also generated significant scientific and engineering knowledge, positioning uOttawa and, more broadly, Ontario at the forefront of the exciting research field of high efficiency solar generation.

"We are proud to support Canadian-based innovation in renewables technology." said Linda L. Bertoldi, National Leader of Borden Ladner Gervais Electricity Markets Group. "Companies like Morgan Solar deserve recognition for their efforts to achieve efficiencies in this increasingly important sector of our electricity supply."

As a result of its simple, compact design, the Sun Simba can be manufactured at a fraction of the costs of existing solar panels, while converting sunlight to electricity at market-leading efficiencies 28-31. Sun Simba panels are being tested in labs in Toronto, Ottawa, and Denver.

"Our goal with this award was to celebrate extraordinary partnerships that have lead to astonishing innovations," said Dave Butters, President of APPrO. "In Morgan Solar we found our winner because of their business promise of excellence in solar energy and innovation in the field."

The Canadian Energy Innovation Award aims to be one of North America's leading green energy awards. The annual award was developed in 2010, as a collaboration between industry and academia. The $5,000 award will create a legacy of exceptional and innovative accomplishments in the sustainable energy sector. Awards winners are themselves a partnership between an institute of higher learner and a private researcher.

The founding partners for the award include: Ontario Centres of Excellence OCE, Borden Ladner Gervais LLP BLG, and the Association of Power Producers of Ontario APPrO.

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