• Friday, November 20, 2009 Latest Update: 4:41PM
Ucilia Wang | November 6, 2009 at 2:42 PM 2 Comments

GE to Close U.S. Solar Panel Factory

General Electric plans to close its only U.S. solar panel factory because production costs have exceeded sale prices.

The Fairfield, Conn.-based company told the Dow Jones Clean Technology Insight that silicon panel manufacturing at its facility in Delaware, will stop in January.

GE will shutter the factory all together by June. The factory can produce 34 megawatts of solar panels per year and employs 82 people. GE plans to layoff the workers with severance packages.

The move reflects the tough times experienced by solar energy equipment makers worldwide as supply far exceeded demand over the past year. Recession and a big reduction in solar subsidies in Spain - once a booming market - are key contributors.

Some manufacturers have seen prices for their products fall by anywhere from 30 percent to 50 percent over the past year.

Some solar company executives say the decline has slowed in recent months as demand picked up, mostly in Europe. But they remain worried about the pace of market recovery.

Earlier this week, Marlboro, Mass.-based Evergreen Solar said it would move panel production from its factory in Devens, Mass., to China next year in order to cut costs.

Earlier this year, BP Solar announced it would close its solar panel factory in Maryland and outsource that work to a contract manufacturer. BP said back then that it would continue to make silicon ingots, wafers and cells in Maryland.

Last month, BP said it had hired Jabil Circuit to assemble panels at a Jabil factory in Poland. 

Comments [2]

  • rooferguy 11/6/09 6:20 PM

    Oversupply - TERRIFIC, bring it on.  That reduces the installed price for solar power systems.  Lower cost=higher volumes=greater energy savings.

    Because of cheap panels he solar industry is creating installation jobs at a feverish pace.  If you don’t know it, one of the biggest panel factories in the U.S. only employs 200 people.  We’re creating 10x that many jobs on the installation and services side with cheap panels.  And inexpensive, plug & play panels that are easy to install will put even more electricians and roofers to work installing solar.

    So the way to create the most net U.S. jobs is to make solar panels as inexpensively as possible in China, not to insist that panels are made—at a high price—in the U.S.  Because those high-priced U.S. panels won’t result in a lot of installed customers (unless we also naively require U.S.-made content, which further distorts the economics).

    Reply
  • Ponyboy 11/9/09 1:15 PM

    That concept and line of thinking is what is dooming American industry. What will you do when all production is gone and no one can afford to have thier rof done? Heck there is always food service right?

    Reply

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