First Solar is expecting to be fully operational next year and has a
nameplate capacity of 2.7 GW, so it might produce 2 GW or more. In fact,
the company has 2 GW of contracted projects for the upcoming year,
plus a number of others that also are expected to be finished during the
same period. That adds up to a lot of solar power being
manufactured and installed – especially in just one year.
Demand
and increasing production line efficiency are contributing to the
expected rise in output. The US investment tax credit situation is
something that has created an uncertainty and tension. Some people might
like to take advantage of it while it is still in place, and others
might be balking already, wanting to see what happens in Congress. (Of course, it should be renewed because it is working, but there are influencers who don’t want solar power to succeed.)
Upgrades to production lines have helped too, “Since the inception of
the module end-of-life programme, we have continued to pursue
engineering and process improvements to reduce the cost of collecting
and recycling the modules. Our continuous improvement efforts have
resulted in an automated and continuous flow process, which is
significantly lowering the cost of the end-of-life programme,” explained Mark R. Widmar, CFO of First Solar.
Remember Solyndra? It was supposed to have an annual
production ranging from 300 to 600 MW. Well, First Solar could blow
that amount out of the water in 2016. If First Solar does achieve such a high rate of production, will the
news be blasted repeatedly far and wide like the Solyndra failure was? Let’s remember that with adequate sunshine, one megawatt of solar
power can generate enough electricity to power about 160 homes. Two
gigawatts is two thousand megawatts, which is enough for 320,000 homes.
http://cleantechnica.com/2015/11/12/first-solar-could-hit-2-gw-of-production-in-2016/
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