By the end of 2014, solar deployment is slated to be up nearly 40
percent over 2013. Today, the booming demand for solar energy supports
more than 173,000 jobs and the U.S. has become the third largest solar
market in the world.
You can find solar energy atop your neighborhood
big box store, powering a Las Vegas casino, in the middle of the desert,
or on your own roof. The latest good news comes from the solar manufacturing sector. In
the past nine months, U.S. solar manufacturing has shown unmistakable
signs of growth. Strong market demand in the U.S. has attracted some
solar manufacturers stateside and as market demand grows, the Energy
Department’s investments in this sector have begun to bear fruit.
Three solar manufacturing companies that have received research and
development funding from the Department’s SunShot Initiative have
recently announced new factories or factory expansions in the U.S.
These include a new 200 megawatt plant that is up and running in
Michigan and an expansion of an Oregon manufacturing facility, with
plans to create 200 new jobs there. A third company just broke ground on
a 1 gigawatt capacity factory in New York. This manufacturer has found
U.S. partners and market conditions favorable enough to aim for a U.S.
plant that is two orders of magnitude larger than originally planned.
SunShot also supports companies that are manufacturing other solar
system components like solar cell measurement tools and PV-ready
electric meter collars in the U.S. These companies have leveraged
SunShot’s support to develop innovative and advanced manufacturing
processes from differentiated technology design to automation in order
to establish a competitive advantage needed to make these new facilities
a reality here at home.
In response, several foreign-based solar manufacturing companies have
announced plans to evaluate U.S. market conditions or to build
manufacturing facilities here. As solar manufacturing begins to grow in the U.S., SunShot is
committed to providing targeted, competitive research and development
funding that moves products to market quickly while leveraging American
ingenuity and innovation. To this end, today SunShot launched
its SunShot Technology-to-Market funding opportunity, which aims to
support entrepreneurs and small and large companies to develop solar
technologies from prototype to scale-up with $45 million in available
funding.
SunShot is supporting innovation in manufacturing to ensure
U.S.-developed technologies can capture a larger portion of the global
value in solar manufacturing, currently estimated to be about $120
billion worldwide, with a strong growth trajectory in coming years. This
is an enormous economic opportunity for any country, and the Energy
Department’s SunShot initiative will continue to empower U.S.-based
manufacturers to embrace this opportunity.
And the manufacturing sector pays it forward — manufacturing-based industries contribute 70 percent of all research & development funding available throughout the U.S.
When we launched the SunShot Initiative in 2011, one of its 2020
goals was that the U.S. solar market could produce the equivalent
capacity of solar energy products it consumes. We are now on track to
reach that target, even as U.S. solar demand continues to climb. We are
ready to power the nation and fight climate change with
domestically-produced solar energy technologies.
http://www.renewableenergyworld.com/rea/news/article/2015/01/us-solar-manufacturing-rising-on-the-horizon
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