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Abound Solar, Sunovia Chasing After First Solar

By Chris Morrison | Apr 16, 2009

Cadmium telluride-based thin film solar cells are certainly the technology of the moment. Following First Solar’s announcement in February that it’s producing cells for under $1 per watt, two more firms, Abound Solar (previously AVA Solar) and Sunovia have lined up with news of their own.

Of the two, Abound is the more mature firm, having taken a big $104 million funding last year. Now the company is finishing up construction on a 200 megawatt plant, which will reach full capacity in about a year. But the company is betting that it can beat First Solar’s 98 cent per watt production cost within three months, according to statements by CEO Pascal Noronha in Reuters.

That’s a pretty audacious claim, for a company that currently has only a fraction of First Solar’s output. Noronha claims the key is in factory efficiency, with most of his line fully automated. But cost per watt is not the only important metric; others, like cell efficiency and weight, also figure in. And if First Solar is worried, it certainly has time to invest in improvements to its process.

Next year will see First Solar at over a 1,000 megawatts of production and Abound at 200 megawatts, although the race will not be on in earnest until both are producing at higher volumes. That may not take long, though. First Solar will certainly be looking to capitalize on its market leader position, and Abound is chasing after over $500 million in Department of Energy loan guarantees, according to Clean Technology Investor.

Sunovia, the dark horse of the three, is a much smaller company with a somewhat unusual technology that nevertheless relies on the CdTe chemistry.

The company’s technique involves layering CdTe over a standard silicon cell to create what’s known as a multi-junction cell, capable of achieving higher efficiencies than ordinary silicon (which in turn is much better than a plain CdTe cell). Combining the two technologies, Sunovia hopes to put a lower cost on typically pricy high-efficiency cells.

Is it competitive with First Solar? Yes and no. If it can pull off its efficiency trick, Sunovia will be First Solar’s polar opposite, and the market will likely treat the two as if they’re in different industries. But tellurium is in short supply, and if First Solar and competitors like Abound get to scale up as quickly as they like, the commodity stockpiles might not keep up.

Don’t count on that to stop Sunovia, though. The company just took in $9 million from the Department of Defense to expand manufacturing. In all likelihood, the company will also be searching for private investors for a follow-up on its $12 million venture capital round, taken last May.

Chris Morrison, a reporter on energy, renewables and climate change, is the former lead cleantech writer for VentureBeat. Follow him on Twitter.

BNET User Analysis

Web Buzz:
  • GE: Solar business is our 'next wind'

    CNET News - 61 days 19 hours 39 minutes ago

    CAMBRIDGE, Mass.--General Electric plans to give its solar business a charge in two years with the introduction of panels with the same solar cell material used by industry cost leader First Solar.In 2011, the energy giant expects to produce solar panels made with cadmium telluride, a thin-film solar cell material, said Michael Idelchik, vice...

  • Is 5N Plus losing traction with First Solar?

    Cleantech Group - 103 days 10 hours 11 minutes ago

    Shares of Montreal-based 5N Plus (TSE:VNP) were down more than 4.5 percent to close at C$6.35 (US$5.85) today on the news that the company might be losing its position as the key supplier of cadmium telluride to thin-film leader First Solar (Nasdaq: FSLR).  5N Plus, which manufactures high-purity metals for the electronics and solar-power...

  • Rumor: First Solar Looks to Experiment with CIGS

    Seeking Alpha - 303 days 11 hours 50 minutes ago

    Greentech Media submits: By Michael Kanellos Speculation is swirling that First Solar FSLR -- the thin-film solar cell giant that makes cadmium telluride solar cells -- is taking a look at CIGS. by Greentech Media

  • Chasing First Solar: Why Oerlikon, Applied Materials Think They Can Catch Up

    Earth2tech.com - 132 days 14 hours 41 minutes ago

    Despite the best efforts of solar firms to reduce cost and raise the efficiency of solar material, many in the industry still find themselves chasing thin-film solar darling First Solar , which makes high-efficiency cadmium-telluride solar film panels. In particular, Oerlikon Solar and Applied Materials , which have gigawatts of orders and...

  • ENN Solar shows off tandem junction tech at Intersolar

    Cleantech Group - 133 days 8 hours 10 minutes ago

    Chinese thin-film developer ENN Solar Energy is showing off its new, silicon thin-film solar products with tandem junction technology today for the first time in North America. The company claims the power output per installed watt is higher than conventional photovoltaic cells. The announcement was made in conjunction with the Intersolar North...

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