The Denver Post

Solar panel maker considers Colorado

Adams County lining up to snag a second large renewable-energy manufactur­ing plant this year

- By Aldo Svaldi asvaldi@denverpost.com

Just weeks after beating out the competitio­n for a manufactur­ing plant making a cutting-edge electric vehicle battery, Adams County is in the running to host a solar panel manufactur­ing facility that could employ nearly 1,000 workers.

The Colorado Economic Developmen­t Commission approved nearly $9.2 million in Job Growth Incentive Tax Credits on Thursday morning for Project Pothos, the code name given to a new joint venture between a U.S. and foreign company looking to launch a solar panel manufactur­ing plant.

Those tax credits are conditione­d on the company creating 951 jobs over an eight-year period. The engineerin­g, manufactur­ing and administra­tive jobs are expected to pay an average of $71,940 a year or about 110% of the average annual wage in Adams County.

This month Amprius Technologi­es, which has developed a more efficient silicon anode technology for lithium-ion batteries, confirmed it would build a 775,000- square-foot plant in Brighton employing 330 workers initially. The state, which beat out Georgia and Texas, extended $5.49 million in similar tax credits.

The Inflation Reduction Act, signed into law last August, provides bigger tax breaks for solar panels, batteries and other renewable energy technology containing more domestical­ly made components. That has created an incentive to domestical­ly make solar panels, a market that China largely has dominated.

“This project would support the state’s economic goals by creating jobs in the economy in the renewable-energy sector,” Michelle Hadwiger, director of global business developmen­t at the Colorado Office of Economic Developmen­t and Internatio­nal Trade told commission­ers at their monthly meeting.

She said the state award requires the startup to raise $18.75 million in funds, about 75% of the $25 million it plans to raise to get off the ground. An executive of the company at the meeting said the full $25 million had been raised.

The company, which also is considerin­g Texas, said it zeroed in on Adams County because of its proximity to the airport and the I-25, I-70 and I-76 highway corridors, and its more available housing supply. Although the joint venture doesn’t have any employees yet, the U.S. partner employs about 6,000 workers, while the foreign partner employs about 2,000.

Adams County has made some inroads in renewable energy but also has suffered losses. Vestas, a Danish wind turbine maker, announced in February 2021 that it was closing its Brighton blade plant and letting go of 185 workers there.

The second-largest incentive award Thursday. at $2.3 million. went to Project Snowflake, a geohazard mitigation firm that also is considerin­g Adams County for 129 jobs paying an average annual wage of $129,981. The company has 740 employees, including 87 in Colorado. About 50 of

the jobs are expected within the next three years. Kentucky is also in the running.

A third incentive award, worth $663,383, could help Colorado address its waste tire problem, which ranks as one of the nation’s worst. The recycling company behind Project Molecule is looking at locations in Weld County or Mississipp­i for a waste-to-energy plant that will use pyrolysis technology to convert tires and rubber to diesel fuel, recycled carbon black and steel.

The new plant, which is expected to use a nearly zero-emis

sion closed-loop process, is targeting a processing capacity of 150 tons of waste material a day. Starting with about 30 million tires now sitting in a massive monofil in Hudson, and later fed with the 6 million tires disposed of annually in the state, the plant is expected to generate 5.47 million gallons of diesel fuel, 20.8 million kilograms of carbon black and 6.57 million kilograms of steel per year.

About 90 workers earning an average annual wage of $63,340 are expected to staff the facility once it is fully operationa­l.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States