Hanwha Solutions, the Korean company behind the Hanwha Q CELLS solar brand, plans to invest $160.47 million for a 16.67% stake in REC Silicon ASA, the company that owns the REC Silicon solar-grade polysilicon manufacturing plant in Moses Lake, Washington. Hanwha, which supports the 1.7-GW Q CELLS solar panel assembly plant in Dalton, Georgia, said this move will secure low-carbon PV materials for the U.S. supply chain.
The investment in REC Silicon will allow Hanwha to make further investments in the U.S. solar value chain, dependent on passage of the Solar Energy Manufacturing Act (SEMA) by Congress, which provides tax credits to solar manufacturers.
REC Silicon operates two polysilicon manufacturing facilities in the United States, with an annual production capacity of 20,000 MT: 18,000 at Moses Lake, Washington, and 2,000 at Butte, Montana. Using hydropower-based clean energy, REC Silicon can produce low-cost polysilicon without emitting greenhouse gases.
The Moses Lake facility has been dormant for the last few years as it has been priced out of the Chinese market and there are currently no solar cell manufacturers in the United States.
“Most US-based polysilicon manufacturers have halted their production for solar-grade polysilicon, including REC Silicon at Moses Lake. Signing SEMA into law and leveraging smart trade and other federal policies will boost solar manufacturing in the United States,” said a Hanwha Solutions spokesperson. “Capitalizing on our expertise in polysilicon production, we will reopen the Moses Lake facility and jumpstart REC Silicon production in the U.S.”
No further information at this point as to where the solar-grade polysilicon production in Moses Lake will head to be made into solar cells for use by U.S. solar module assemblers.
Jason says
Here comes the prescription from Dr. Hanwha Korean, give me tax credit(more federal deficit) and subsidies(higher government debt), I will make them in America for you @higher wholesale and retail price.
In a nutshell, American middle class shoulder it!
jason says
GLW manufacturers polysilicon under HEMLOCK
Solarman says
“Hanwha Solutions, the Korean company behind the Hanwha Q CELLS solar brand, plans to invest $160.47 million for a 16.67% stake in REC Silicon ASA, the company that owns the REC Silicon solar-grade polysilicon manufacturing plant in Moses Lake, Washington. Hanwha, which supports the 1.7-GW Q CELLS solar panel assembly plant in Dalton, Georgia, said this move will secure low-carbon PV materials for the U.S. supply chain.”
I find this to be great news. The capital for this enterprise will come from South Korea as China has been on a manufacturing buying binge for at least the last 10 years in the U.S.. Depending on the scope and type of manufacturing, foreign ownership of local manufacturers can also influence the entire business community in a country. The U.S. pretty much needs an ‘overhaul’ of the supply chain here. It has been found that China makes the bulk of the pharmaceuticals used to manufacture drugs in this country. This is why we are beginning to see such “common” items like blood pressure medications are largely made in China. This may also be the “problem” with some of these products to have been found with known carcinogens as part of the final product. The devices used for the grid in the U.S. are made in other countries also. It has been exposed that the U.S. doesn’t have the manufacturing capability for very large transformers, like those that are used to step up the voltage of a nuclear plant to get the generated electricity onto the grid. Right now these are made in Italy. Many of the protection components used in the grid are manufactured in ‘other’ countries, Italy, Spain, Russia, China but not in the U.S..