Solar Frontier, a unit of Japan's Showa Shell Sekiyu KK, will shut indefinitely its Miyazaki-Daini solar module plant to help its other factory, which has annual output capacity of 900 megawatts, run at full pace next year.
Concentrating production at the Kunitomi plant in southern Japan would enable Solar Frontier, which specialises in CIGS technology - solar panels made of metals copper, indium, gallium and selenium - to produce up to 900 MW of solar modules in 2013, a company spokesman said on Tuesday.
That would be a jump of around 50 percent from estimated output of 600 MW this year, aimed at meeting demand growth in the Japanese market.
"We want to use the newest and most cost-effective Kunitomi plant fully from next year," the spokesman said.
Kunitomi started working in February 2011. Solar Frontier shut one of its three plants in 2010, and Miyazaki-Daini, which has capacity of only 60 MW, will close this December.
In July, Japan's government introduced a scheme to subsidise renewable power suppliers, in a shift of its energy policy away from nuclear power after last year's Fukushima disaster
Companies and homeowners are rushing to register as power suppliers under the scheme. More than 80 percent of the total registered capacity of 1,778 MW is solar.
Source: http://www.reuters.com/article/2012/10/16/solarfrontier-closure-idUSL3E8LG2NK20121016
Concentrating production at the Kunitomi plant in southern Japan would enable Solar Frontier, which specialises in CIGS technology - solar panels made of metals copper, indium, gallium and selenium - to produce up to 900 MW of solar modules in 2013, a company spokesman said on Tuesday.
That would be a jump of around 50 percent from estimated output of 600 MW this year, aimed at meeting demand growth in the Japanese market.
"We want to use the newest and most cost-effective Kunitomi plant fully from next year," the spokesman said.
Kunitomi started working in February 2011. Solar Frontier shut one of its three plants in 2010, and Miyazaki-Daini, which has capacity of only 60 MW, will close this December.
In July, Japan's government introduced a scheme to subsidise renewable power suppliers, in a shift of its energy policy away from nuclear power after last year's Fukushima disaster
Companies and homeowners are rushing to register as power suppliers under the scheme. More than 80 percent of the total registered capacity of 1,778 MW is solar.
Source: http://www.reuters.com/article/2012/10/16/solarfrontier-closure-idUSL3E8LG2NK20121016
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