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Solyndra DOE loan guarantee backs a Fremont solar manufacturing expansion, driving clean energy, stimulus investment, green jobs, and rooftop installations, with panels powering 24,000 homes and output rivaling three coal plants nationwide.
The Main Points
Federal backing under the stimulus to expand Solyndra's plant, cut lender risk and speed clean energy job creation.
- Up to 3,000 construction jobs, 1,000 long-term roles
- First DOE loan guarantee since the 1980s
- Part of $787 billion stimulus package
- Panels power about 24,000 homes annually
A California company that makes solar panels will receive a $535 million federal loan guarantee, allowing it to complete the first phase of a new manufacturing plant in Fremont.
The expansion is expected to create up to 3,000 construction jobs and 1,000 long-term jobs.
The loan guarantee for Solyndra Inc. is the first renewable-energy loan guarantee issued by the U.S. Department of Energy since the 1980s and will be part of the $787 billion stimulus package.
The DOE loan guarantee to Solyndra means the government has to repay the loan if the company cannot.
The solar panels built at the plant will provide enough energy to power about 24,000 homes a year. Officials said hundreds of jobs will be created as the solar panels are installed on rooftops around the country.
"This funding is great news for Fremont and California because the project will create thousands of jobs, stimulate our economy and move us closer to our clean energy goals," Schwarzenegger said in a statement to The Associated Press.
The news is welcome for the city of 215,000, which sits on the eastern edge of San Francisco Bay near Silicon Valley and near projects like the 550 MW California project now underway.
Fremont was stung recently with the announcement by Toyota Motor Corp. that it was shutting a plant it ran with General Motors Corp. for 25 years. Under the decision, Toyota will stop production at the New United Motor Manufacturing Inc. plant in March 2010, moving production to its other plants in the U.S., Canada and Japan, even as First Solar plants near a U.S. loan decision elsewhere in the country.
The plant employs about 4,600 workers.
The first phase of the Solyndra facility could lead to the production of as many new solar panels as the U.S. produced in all of 2005, underscoring momentum behind projects like the world's largest solar array across the industry today. Those panels can generate as much electricity as three coal-fired power plants, the Department of Energy official said.
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