Panasonic looks to lead in solar in Japan


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Panasonic-Sanyo Solar Home Systems integrate solar panels, lithium-ion batteries, HVAC, security, and IoT controls, enabling renewable energy generation, storage, smart grid connectivity, and net metering for near zero-emissions living in Japan.

 

What This Means

Integrated home platforms with solar, lithium-ion batteries, HVAC, and IoT to generate, store, and manage clean energy.

  • Bundles solar, storage, HVAC, security, and controls
  • Sell surplus power via net metering in Japan
  • Night-time water heating leverages off-peak tariffs
  • Lithium-ion batteries balance loads and provide backup

 

Panasonic Corp. is banking on the solar-panel business that it gained by acquiring domestic rival Sanyo, aiming for top market share of at least 35 percent in Japan by 2012.

 

New solar generation products, being offered in Japan's solar market starting next month, combine Sanyo Electric Co.'s solar technology with Panasonic's sales networks in appliances and housing, said Panasonic Executive Vice President Toshihiro Sakamoto.

Panasonic will be able to provide overall energy-saving systems for homes that will include rechargeable batteries, heating and air conditioning, security systems and Net-linking gadgets besides solar panels, which will all be hooked up to each other, reflecting how Japan harnesses the rising sun with integrated home solutions today, he said.

Homes will be able to save on utility costs by selling surplus power from solar power generation systems, a trend where home solar sales boost the photovoltaic market across Japan, and using water heaters at night when utility rates are cheaper, he said.

"You will be living with virtually zero carbon-dioxide emissions through creating, saving, storing and managing energy," Sakamoto said in Tokyo.

Panasonic took over Sanyo in December and gained its solar-panel business as well as other businesses such as home appliances and batteries.

Although overlap in consumer electronics in the two companies is being eliminated, Panasonic has much to gain from Sanyo's technological prowess in solar panels and lithium-ion batteries, including hybrid battery deals that reinforce its automotive position, which are expected to be in stronger demand as the popularity of green vehicles grows.

The Osaka-based maker of Viera plasma panel TVs, has made being environmentally-friendly a major theme in its growth strategy, as moves like solar panels on Prius hybrids signal rising consumer interest, hoping to become "the No. 1 green innovation company in the electronics industry" by 2018.

 

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