El Paso Times

Factories are partnering for US-made solar panels

- Nichola Groom

Two small solar manufactur­ers on Wednesday said they are joining forces to make panels that will enable their customers, U.S. solar project developers, to collect on a lucrative new federal subsidy for American-made clean energy equipment.

The agreement between Georgiabas­ed solar cell producer Suniva and Canada’s Heliene, which has panelmakin­g operations in Minnesota, is being touted by the Biden administra­tion as evidence that Inflation Reduction Act (IRA) subsidies are succeeding in building a domestic solar manufactur­ing industry to compete with China.

“Before this Administra­tion, solar companies across the United States were struggling,” Treasury Secretary Janet Yellen, who was to visit Suniva’s Norcross, Georgia, facility Wednesday, said in a statement provided to Reuters. She noted that 20% of U.S. solar manufactur­ing jobs were lost between 2016 and 2020. Suniva itself is restarting an idled factory.

“Now, though there remain significan­t challenges, Inflation Reduction Act tax credits are helping change the game,” Yellen added.

Under the three-year, $400 million deal, Suniva will supply cells to Heliene, which will assemble them into panels. The products will be able to supply about 2 gigawatts of solar projects, according to Suniva. That would be enough capacity to power about 350,000 homes.

Solar project builders that use panels containing American-made cells will be able to claim a 10% tax credit for using domestic content, according to Treasury Department rules unveiled nearly a year ago. That bonus credit, created in the 2022 IRA, has been regarded by developers as elusive because there is no current U.S. supply of silicon-based solar cells, the predominan­t industry technology. Some solar manufactur­ers have lobbied for more stringent domestic content rules to counter a flood of Chinesemad­e products in the global market.

“This contract is a testament to the effectiven­ess of the Inflation Reduction Act and Treasury’s May 2023 domestic content guidance,” Suniva CEO Cristiano Amoruso said in a statement.

 ?? CARLOS BARRIA/REUTERS FILE ?? Some solar manufactur­ers want tougher domestic content rules to counter a flood of Chinese-made products in the global market.
CARLOS BARRIA/REUTERS FILE Some solar manufactur­ers want tougher domestic content rules to counter a flood of Chinese-made products in the global market.

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