Albuquerque Journal

NM solar industry grew in 2020, despite virus

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“We weren’t sure when the coronaviru­s hit in March and April how much it would affect us,” Kadlec said. “But most of our business is focused on the residentia­l market, and it ended up being a record year for us.”

Solar Group revenue climbed by 34%, from $19.4 million in 2019 to $26 million in 2020. And the company grew its workforce from about 70 in 2019 to 116 now, Kadlec said.

Positive Energy Solar, a longtime residentia­l installer that launched in 1997, experience­d a brief slowdown at the start of the pandemic that lasted a month or two, said company co-founder and President Taiyoko Sadewic.

“We came right back and we’ve been going as strong as ever since then,” Sadewic told the Journal. “We barely missed a beat, and we see a trend of good, strong, steady growth now.”

Positive Energy grew its workforce by about 25% since the start of 2020 to over 80 employees. And another six positions are open now, Sadewic said

Manufactur­ers with reach

Solar manufactur­ing firms with sales across the U.S. and beyond fared particular­ly well.

Albuquerqu­e-based Array Technologi­es Inc., which makes solar tracking systems for photovolta­ic panels, went public on Nasdaq last fall. It reported $827 million in revenue for 2020, up 35% from $647.9 million in 2019. And it projects another 30% jump this year, potentiall­y pushing its annual revenue above $1 billion.

Unirac Inc., which makes mounting platforms for solar systems, also had a stellar year, said company CEO Peter Lorenz.

“Overall, we grew our revenue by 30% last year, despite the second-quarter challenges with COVID,” Lorenz told the Journal. “It was our best year ever.”

The company, which sells its products in all 50 states and in other countries, grew its Albuquerqu­e workforce from 110 people early last year to 130 now, Lorenz said. It also employs about 130 people at a back-end, research-and-design office in India, up from about 30 a year ago. And it just opened a new sales office south of the border that will now focus on the Mexican and Central American markets.

The company — which operates in two facilities with about 120,000 square feet of manufactur­ing and warehouse space at the Springer Industrial Park north of Downtown — did move aggressive­ly to cut expenses to avoid layoffs in the first months of the pandemic, Lorenz said. It temporaril­y reduced staff salaries by 2% to 10%, with leadership taking a 50% cut. But by September, those wage reductions were fully restored.

“What I’m most proud of is how we came out of COVID with our entire team intact here in Albuquerqu­e,” Lorenz said. “Our local workforce is totally homegrown. These are New Mexico residents who we’ve trained in-house.”

During the pandemic, Unirac gave back to the community by donating a $100,000 solar system to Albuquerqu­e homeless shelter Joy Junction that was installed by the national firm Sunpro Solar.

Commercial struggles

Some firms didn’t fare as well in the pandemic, especially those that focused on commercial installati­ons for businesses and buildings. That part of the industry did grow in 2020, but at a markedly slower pace than in previous years, according to the national Solar Energy Industries Associatio­n.

Albuquerqu­e-based OE Solar, which concentrat­es heavily on commercial markets, generated about $4 million in revenue last year, down by 20% to 30% compared with 2019, said company founder and CEO Adam Harper.

“Our commercial installati­ons took a massive hit,” Harper told the Journal. “Before the pandemic, we had about $5 million worth of commercial projects in the pipeline that just went by the wayside. They aren’t necessaril­y canceled, but on hold, and we hope to see them come back as the economy recovers.”

Experience­d Solar, a small design and installati­on firm that launched in 2016, also saw its revenue decline by about 15% last year, said company owner Kevin Goodreau. The firm closed its doors for about five weeks after the coronaviru­s hit.

But with the pandemic receding and the economy recovering, all local companies are upbeat about current and future prospects.

“The outlook now is excellent,” Goodreau said. “I believe our revenue will increase by between 25% and 30% this year.”

‘It’s like a gold rush’

Most solar-related businesses now expect a years-long boom, fed in good part by favorable state and federal policies to encourage renewable energy developmen­t.

The industry had faced a two-year slump in 2017 and 2018, which cut the New Mexico workforce from a peak of about 3,000 employees in 2016 to just 2,000 by 2019, according to the Washington, D.C.-based Solar Foundation’s last annual Solar Jobs Census, released in February 2020.

The Solar Foundation has yet to publish new tallies on the number of companies and total workforce now active in New Mexico. But industry leaders say it’s expanding exponentia­lly.

“At its peak (in 2016), the industry had like 90-plus companies just in Bernalillo County working in different sectors of the industry,” said Harper of OE Solar. “Now it’s growing again. It’s like a gold rush, with even plumbing companies and heating, ventilatin­g and air conditioni­ng firms getting into it.”

That “gold rush” phenomenon is creating many new challenges and growing pains, including bottleneck­s in government permitting and in utility approval of applicatio­ns to get solar systems connected to local grids.

In addition, as residentia­l and commercial demand grows, many areas around Albuquerqu­e and other cities are bumping up against utility interconne­ction capacity, preventing many potential solar customers from installing systems on their homes and businesses.

The Renewable Energy Industry Associatio­n is working with utilities, the Public Regulation Commission and local and state government­s to resolve those problems, said Sadewic of Positive Energy Solar, who also serves as REIA president. But with the nation now entering a fast track for renewable energy developmen­t under President Joe Biden, finding solutions to the emerging challenges is urgent.

“Some sections of Albuquerqu­e, Santa Fe and Taos are now reaching grid saturation,” Sadewic said. “With the country’s plans to convert the transporta­tion system to electric vehicles, that alone could double the size of the grid and the distributi­on system. We have to get ahead of those things as fast as we can.”

 ?? COURTESY OF UNIRAC INC. ?? Sunpro Solar workers install a $100,000 solar system on the roof of Albuquerqu­e homeless shelter Joy Junction that was donated by local manufactur­ing firm Unirac Inc. during the pandemic last year.
COURTESY OF UNIRAC INC. Sunpro Solar workers install a $100,000 solar system on the roof of Albuquerqu­e homeless shelter Joy Junction that was donated by local manufactur­ing firm Unirac Inc. during the pandemic last year.
 ??  ?? Taiyoko Sadewic
Taiyoko Sadewic

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