Silicon Ink Kingpin Innovalight Signs Up Another PV Customer: This Time, It's Motech : Greentech Media
Innovalight is on a roll.
The VC-funded firm has developed a solar ink that boosts the performance of crystalline silicon solar cells. They've signed a series of deals to sell their efficiency-boosting material to a growing list of China-based crystalline silicon cell and module firms.
This morning, the firm announced yet another customer -- Taiwan's Motech. Motech builds single and multi-crystalline silicon solar cells in Taiwan and reached one gigawatt in production capacity in the third quarter of 2010, making them the largest solar cell manufacturer in Taiwan and one of the top ten manufacturers worldwide in terms of production capacity and output.
This is the fifth announced deal for Innovalight; the firm already has agreements with Asian solar powers Yingli Green Energy, Solarfun, Jinko Solar and JA Solar. This is a meaningful accomplishment for a 65-person Silicon Valley startup. Innovalight's nano-particle materials are produced in the U.S.
In Michael Kanellos' view, Chinese solar developers understand low-cost manufacturing and have the capital to build factories. Innovalight has innovative science on their side -- and these Asian solar giants recognize that value.
Innovalight manufactures a nanotechnology-based silicon ink and licenses a platform process that allows c-Si firms to upgrade solar cell manufacturing production lines, boost performance, and lower production costs.
The platform license business model is novel and seems to be working. Innovalight provides their silicon ink at a nominal cost -- that's not the primary source of their revenue. The licensing model is structured so that Innovalight's customers pay a fee for every wafer produced that uses the Innovalight special sauce. And with a world market of approximately five billion silicon wafers -- there's a large and growing total available market.
The value of the Innovalight product is that it fits gracefully into a customer's production process. One process step is added at the front end, after the wafer texturing step, and the Innovalight ink step is integrated into the customer's production line.
Innovalight owns a small ten-megawatt cell production line, which looks a lot like the production lines used by the Asian solar vendors. This allows Innovalight and its partners to develop their product and processes in a real world test bed and garners the credibility necessary for a VC-funded David to work with the gigawatt-scale Asian solar Goliaths.
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Showing posts with label Yingli. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Yingli. Show all posts
Thursday, January 20, 2011
Friday, October 22, 2010
Deutche Bank Bullish on China Solar - Suntech, RenaSola, Trina, Yingli
Deutsche Bank Remains Bullish on China Solar Energy Sector: Upgrades Suntech Power (STP) to Buy
9:41 am ET 10/19/2010 - StreetInsider
Deutsche Bank upgrades Suntech Power (NYSE: STP) from Hold to Buy. Deutsche analyst says, "We expect the leading China solar PV manufacturers to report strong sets of results in 3Q10E and 4Q10E, and believe this momentum should be further extended beyond 2010 due to a more stable module ASP outlook in 1Q11 qoq. Module ASP may start to drop in 2Q11E but we think this risk is likely to be overcome by the ongoing effort to reduce manufacturing costs. The sector trades at an inexpensive valuation of 5-7x 2011E P/E; we reiterate Buy on ReneSola (NYSE: SOL), Trina (NYSE: TSL) and Yingli (NYSE: YGE), and upgrade Suntech to Buy." "We remain bullish on ReneSola despite the 66% increase in share price in the past three months. We reiterate Buy on Trina mainly on its manufacturing cost leadership. We also like Yingli but see possible near-term pressure on 3Q10E gross margins due to the additional ramp-up cost from its polysilicon facility and new production lines. We upgrade Suntech as we believe the stock now offers an attractive risk-adjusted reward return after a year of share underperformance and expect the company to secure new wafer capacity in the near term." To see all the upgrades/downgrades on shares of STP, visit our Analyst Ratings page.Shares are trading at $9.27, down $0.27 (-2.86%) this morning.
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