Webinar Reliable Solar Pv Structure Design and Innovation

Upcoming FREE webinar on “Reliable Solar PV Structure Design and Innovation” organized by Middle East Solar Industry Association (MESIA), powered by Solarabic سولارابيك.

We will discuss the effect of the new large format modules on the current PV structure design, improvements, new materials, lessons learned from cases in the Middle East and many more!

When: 5th October, 16:00 GST
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Speakers include:
Hans Jürgen Sauter, VP Middle East and Africa, Nextracker Inc.
Dinesh Thakare, Head – Design & Engineering (RT), CleanMax
Elena García Ortiz, Project Manager MEA, UL Solutions
Finn Chow, Sales Manager APAC Marketing, Antaisolar
Moderator: Ritesh Pothan, Director BD – APAC & AMEA, DroneBase

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French developer seeks green tick for one of Australia’s largest solar and battery projects – pv magazine Australia

French renewables developer TE H2 has filed an application with the Australian government seeking approval for a 2.7 GW solar farm and 6 GWh battery energy storage project to be built in the Northern Territory.
Image: TotalEnergies
TE H2, a joint venture between French oil giant TotalEnergies and Paris-headquartered renewables producer Eren Groupe, has submitted plans for one of Australia’s largest solar and battery energy storage projects for review under the Environment Protection and Biodiversity Conservation (EPBC) Act.
The federal government-administered EPBC review process aims to protect nationally threatened species and ecological communities.
The $2.8 billion Wak Wak project, proposed for a 3,400-hectare site near Humpty Doo, about 48 kilometres south of Darwin, is to include a 2.7 GW solar farm that would “allow for an optimised, year-round energy supply to the potential electricity off-takers.”
In documents referred for assessment under the federal EPBC Act, TE H2 said the concept design also includes 6 GWh of battery energy storage to “firm up the renewable energy supplied and to balance solar power generation with electricity consumption at downstream facilities, provide local network stability services, and serve as a backup to ensure a secure facility shutdown when needed.”
TE H2 said while “the project is currently at concept design stage,” the objective of the proposal is to generate and store renewable solar energy for both existing industry in the greater Darwin region, and potentially, for the generation of renewable green hydrogen.
“The ultimate end use of the solar energy is as a critical input to produce firm renewables energy supply to existing industrial end users on Middle Arm initially and to power green hydrogen production at the Middle Arm Precinct at a later stage,” TE H2 said.
EPBC referral documents say renewable energy generated at the Wak Wak facility will be sent via a planned high-voltage overhead transmission line to Middle Arm where TE H2 has the Darwin H2 Hub in development, and potentially connect into the Darwin Katherine grid.
TE H2’s proposed Darwin H2 Hub is to include a 1 GW electrolyser capable of producing more than 80,000 tonnes of green hydrogen per annum for national and international markets.
Construction of the Wak Wak solar and battery facility is expected to commence in 2027, pending project approvals, It is likely the solar farm will be developed in stages with the first phase expected to be in the vicinity of up to 900 MW.
TE H2 said power for construction will include a combination of temporary solar and battery storage on site, likely supplemented by diesel generators during the establishment and early works phase.
It is expected the project will generate up to 900 jobs during the construction phase.
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JinkoSolar surpasses 400 GW in shipments and signals a new era for solar power: where is the industry heading? – Strategic Energy Europe

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The global photovoltaic industry is undergoing a structural transformation marked by industrial scale, tax changes, technological innovation and growing demand for renewable power generation. In this context, JinkoSolar reached a new milestone by surpassing 400 GW in cumulative shipments of solar modules worldwide.
This deployment volume is equivalent to enough capacity to supply approximately 40 million homes, an indicator that highlights the magnitude of solar energy’s progress over the past two decades. According to JinkoSolar, twenty years ago solar energy cost around USD 3/W, while today the price can be around USD 0.10/W, a reduction that has completely transformed the technology’s competitiveness compared with other sources of power generation.
This expansion process is not only the result of economies of scale. It also reflects two decades of innovation in cell efficiency, improvements in industrial processes and optimisation of the photovoltaic supply chain.
According to JinkoSolar, the next stage of solar development will no longer focus exclusively on reducing costs, but rather on maximising the value the technology brings to the energy system.The next 20 years will not be about cost, they will be about value,” the company stated.
Alongside this industrial growth, Jinko Solar Co., Ltd., the group’s main operating subsidiary, published preliminary financial results for the 2025 fiscal year. The company clarified that these figures are preliminary and unaudited, and may therefore differ from the group’s consolidated results due to accounting and consolidation differences.
For the full year 2025, Jiangxi Jinko’s preliminary unaudited revenue reached 65.49 billion yuan, representing a 29.18% year-on-year decrease. During the same period, the preliminary net loss attributable to shareholders amounted to 6.79 billion yuan, compared with a net profit attributable to shareholders of 98.9 million yuan recorded in 2024.
In addition, the preliminary net loss attributable to shareholders, excluding non-recurring gains and losses, reached 7.64 billion yuan. According to the company, these results were mainly due to a decline in the profitability of Jiangxi Jinko’s core business, as a result of falling selling prices for photovoltaic products, a phenomenon currently affecting much of the global solar industry.
At the same time, the company continues to strengthen its technological positioning. It recently launched Tiger Neo 3.0, its new module based on third-generation N-type TOPCon cells, a technology positioned among the most advanced within the photovoltaic industry.
The module reaches a maximum power output of 670 W and a conversion efficiency of up to 24.8%, parameters aimed at improving the energy performance of solar projects and reducing the levelised cost of electricity in large-scale installations.
The question now facing the sector is no longer whether solar energy will continue to grow, but how its role within the global energy system will evolve. This structural shift is also being accompanied by a new factor in the global market.
China has decided to eliminate part of the fiscal incentives for photovoltaic exports, including the rebate on value-added tax, a measure that could impact international solar module prices. Industry analysts anticipate that this adjustment could mark the end of the “ultra-cheap” panel era, with potential price increases of up to 15% in 2026.
In this transition scenario, manufacturers such as JinkoSolar believe that the future of the market will increasingly be defined by technological innovation, module efficiency and the energy value that photovoltaics can deliver to global power systems.
by Keep reading
Argentina’s Santa Fe province is assessing new renewable energy auctions under its Generfe programme while expanding the Prosumidores distributed generation scheme, which already counts 1,500 prosumers and nearly 10 MW installed.
by Keep reading
Spain-based developer Energía Aljaval has approved a 2026–2027 strategic plan focused on eight utility-scale solar PV projects with battery energy storage, aiming to reach Ready-to-Build status by 2027 and commercial operation by the end of the decade.
by Keep reading
The solar industry is undergoing a restructuring after years of global overcapacity. Luis Contreras, Managing Director of Yingli Solar, explains how the end of China’s 9% export tax rebate and rising supply chain costs are expected to stabilize prices and bring greater predictability to solar project development.
by Keep reading
Argentina’s Santa Fe province is assessing new renewable energy auctions under its Generfe programme while expanding the Prosumidores distributed generation scheme, which already counts 1,500 prosumers and nearly 10 MW installed.
by Keep reading
Spain-based developer Energía Aljaval has approved a 2026–2027 strategic plan focused on eight utility-scale solar PV projects with battery energy storage, aiming to reach Ready-to-Build status by 2027 and commercial operation by the end of the decade.
by Keep reading
The solar industry is undergoing a restructuring after years of global overcapacity. Luis Contreras, Managing Director of Yingli Solar, explains how the end of China’s 9% export tax rebate and rising supply chain costs are expected to stabilize prices and bring greater predictability to solar project development.
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Jiang Nan Construction Engineering Group Launches Construction of 25 MW Ground-Mounted Photovoltaic Power Station in Mauritius, Supporting Local Energy Transformation and Sustainable Development – Yahoo Finance

Jiang Nan Construction Engineering Group Launches Construction of 25 MW Ground-Mounted Photovoltaic Power Station in Mauritius, Supporting Local Energy Transformation and Sustainable Development  Yahoo Finance
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1997 Peking University Prodigy's Small Business Nets Over 100M in Two Years, Eyes Space Next – 36 Kr

Dressed in sporty casual wear with a Labubu hanging on his backpack, sitting across from China Entrepreneur is Feng Fan, a “top student from Peking University” born in 1997. He skillfully took out a bunch of perovskite samples of various specifications from his backpack and talked eloquently at a very fast pace.
The Yanhe Technology he founded became a leading enterprise in the domestic consumer – grade photovoltaic industry in just two years, with an annual revenue of over 100 million yuan. This emerging track stems from the upgrade of domestic photovoltaic technology. Entrepreneurs including Feng Fan all take “eliminating” batteries as their ultimate vision – directly installing thin and light perovskite photovoltaic panels on remote controls, keyboards and mice, and smart door locks.

In the eyes of outsiders, this is not a very “decent” business. Feng Fan is an outstanding graduate of Peking University and an early employee of the AI star company, DeepTech. In the past two years, his daily routine has been to bargain with the bosses of ODM factories and small household appliance enterprises, repeatedly debug and polish a “small item” that only costs a few cents, and even start over for minor parameter differences.
He also joked that he earns hard – earned money from the fragmented market. In his words, others think he should plunge into more “high – end” projects.
What is not well – known to the outside world is that his ultimate dream is actually to make “batteries” for space equipment, including satellites, space computing power, deep – space exploration, and future space – based energy systems and extraterrestrial base construction. In those scenarios, sunlight may be the only sustainable energy source.
It wasn’t until early 2026 that Elon Musk, the founder of Tesla, completely detonated the “space photovoltaic” track. He said that SpaceX and Tesla are jointly building a photovoltaic base with an annual production capacity of 200GW (gigawatts), mainly providing photovoltaic components for space AI satellites and ground data centers. Since then, Feng Fan’s dream of making photovoltaics enter the universe has gradually been known and understood by the outside world.
Yanhe Technology quickly secured nearly 100 million yuan in Series A1 financing due to its involvement in space photovoltaics. Compared with a number of perovskite enterprises that have been established for more than a decade, it stands out.
But only Feng Fan himself knows that since the day the company was founded, space photovoltaics and consumer – grade photovoltaics have been two parallel business lines. He always describes to others that Yanhe Technology is going to grow into a company worth one trillion yuan, and consumer – grade and space photovoltaics are two important battlefields. This is of course considered “inconsistent” by many, so much so that those who know him well think he is being “too idealistic” again – a startup company can’t succeed in two things at the same time.
He is a technological fundamentalist and almost got a “feel – good drama” script from the start. He entered the AI field on the verge of explosion right after graduation and chose the still – emerging commercial spaceflight track when deciding to start his own business independently. He is confident in his judgment and business deconstruction ability and is lucky to gather a group of like – minded people. In the early days, Yanhe Technology had the flavor of a “brotherhood” – style organization. Everyone trusted each other completely and had similar interests.
But the actual situation is far more complicated than he imagined. When the thinking of the elite team collides with that of hundreds of blue – collar workers on the production line, the result is predictable. The consumer – grade photovoltaic sector has many links and is difficult to deconstruct with technology alone.
Feng Fan’s transformation in this process is very obvious. When the huge opportunity of space photovoltaics came, the calmness and realism he showed were completely absent in the past, but he still made a “high – end” plan.

“We aim to achieve satellite applications in the scale of more than a hundred by 2028 and strive to become the leading enterprise in the industry by 2030.” According to him, multiple satellites carrying Yanhe Technology’s batteries will be launched into space this year.
“A startup company can’t burn money on R & D like a large company. It must ensure that the products can be sold, and can’t wait for products to be launched in five or ten years.” Feng Fan said, “We hope to first become a successful commercial company and then gradually become a shining pearl on the crown.”
Feng Fan is among the earliest group of people to engage in consumer – grade perovskite batteries.
Before 2022, his academic and career trajectory was closer to the typical path of a “top – student” scientific research talent. After graduating from Peking University’s Material Chemistry major, he went abroad for further studies and later returned to China to join the AI unicorn company, DeepTech.
In 2020, the AI industry was still in its early stage of development. DeepTech quickly became well – known with its business model of “AI for Science” (artificial intelligence – driven scientific research). The company’s scale and valuation both expanded dozens of times.
But Feng Fan still decided to start his own business after working there for one year. At that time, this decision seemed rather impulsive.
In his opinion, when a cutting – edge business model is implemented, there are always many contradictions in the commercialization process. The game between technology and commercialization made Feng Fan start to frequently think about what really “excites” him.
“I later realized that I really like things that can be implemented. How to implement a good concept and how to make money are completely two different dimensions.” And in his previous academic and work life, Feng Fan was in a research system more oriented towards technology. “Many professors think that technology is the most important, but in the business process, technology is just a part.”
During this period, he often shared his work experiences with his current partner, Peng Zongyang, which also laid the groundwork for their business venture. The two are undergraduate alumni of Peking University. They often meet to play basketball and games, and their personalities have been continuously adjusted in the process of getting along. Feng Fan describes the two of them as “completely complementary.”
“I have a quick temper. When I get too involved in a game, I might even quit the group. But Zongyang is very calm. He will comfort me and tolerate my temper.” Feng Fan joked about himself. This kind of tacit understanding also continued into their subsequent business venture. According to Peng Zongyang’s recollection, the two have hardly had any disagreements over strategies. Even when they encounter contradictions, they can just talk it out. “I’ll wait for him to finish losing his temper and then analyze right and wrong. He can listen to my rational suggestions at that time.”
Peng Zongyang is more like a “scientist.” After graduating from undergraduate, he chose to continue in – depth study in the field of chemical materials and later pursued a doctorate at Peking University, researching in the perovskite field. “He understands technology, and I understand business and the market. Our roles just fit all the links from product to implementation.” In Feng Fan’s view, the basic framework of the company was already in place at that time.

In September 2023, the two hit it off and decided to start a business, but they had no idea where to start.
His style is not to be afraid of making mistakes. As long as the market direction is feasible through research, he will try every possible way and choose the most suitable technical path to follow up continuously without getting entangled in any technical problems encountered in the process.
In the early stage, they focused on commercial spaceflight materials and AI software and hardware because these were the fields that Feng Fan was interested in and were also the hot spots in the capital market at that time. Meanwhile, the application scenarios of perovskite products were still in the exploration stage.
In order to verify the feasibility of these two directions, Feng Fan began to frantically study professional knowledge in high – tech fields such as 3D printing, additive manufacturing, and even satellite bands. But soon he realized his limitations. From concept to actual product, a large number of experimental verifications were needed. For him, who was not from a relevant major, it would take a great deal of energy and time, and the input – output ratio was not high.
This made Feng Fan calm down. He recalibrated his cognition and judgment, shifting from focusing on market hot spots to focusing on what he really understood. Naturally, the first choice fell on the field they were most familiar with – perovskite.
This time, the two were very cautious. In order to verify the feasibility, they continuously consulted industry insiders and teachers and studied all the existing products on the market. It took them three months to sort out two core directions – perovskite photovoltaic power stations and the perovskite consumer – grade market.
At that time, the photovoltaic power station business was obviously a clearer business model, but Feng Fan’s previous work experience made him particularly concerned about the commercialization process.
In his opinion, the competition in the photovoltaic power station industry has entered an “arms race” stage, which requires a large amount of capital and talent. If one enters the market at this time without obvious advantages and differences, they can only follow behind large companies all their lives and may even go bankrupt soon.
“I repeatedly asked myself whether this route is long – term and sustainable. The core question is what kind of company I want to build?” The consumer – grade photovoltaic market seems to be the only opportunity to gain a first – mover advantage. At that stage, there wasn’t even a hit product in this track.
For some time after that, the two got together to demonstrate the product. There was a point that excited them more and more – the AI – enabled hardware is definitely a major trend, which corresponds to greater power consumption. Peng Zongyang said that the battery life is almost the bottleneck of all AI hardware products, and the product feature of perovskite’s weak – light power generation can just meet this demand.
At that time, the indoor consumer scenarios of perovskite overseas were relatively mature and were applied to many products that originally needed batteries, while the domestic market was almost blank. But Feng Fan believes that AI will accelerate the development process of perovskite in China. A new revolutionary product often emerges in an area that no one pays attention to.
In December 2023, they officially decided on the company’s direction – the consumer – grade perovskite market. The first product was an electronic table sign that has no power source and can be powered by indoor light.
This seemingly rational path choice was a huge “sacrifice” for Feng Fan, which means that his main business in the future will be “small business” with a product profit of only a few cents.
“I wasn’t without hesitation. After all, both the aerospace and photovoltaic power station tracks have been favored by capital for a long time.” But Feng Fan’s top priority was to make the company “survive.”
In January 2024, Yanhe Technology was officially established, and the team’s pace significantly accelerated. He focused on financing. In May 2024, the company completed an angel – round financing of tens of millions of yuan; Peng Zongyang was in charge of R & D and the production line internally. In July 2024, the pilot production line was completed.
This process also made their division of labor clearer and has continued ever since: Feng Fan is more involved in the external market, responsible for commercialization and financing; Peng Zongyang is responsible for internal promotion, specializing in technology and product iteration.
As soon as the first – round financing was in place, Feng Fan led the team to meet a wide range of customers and got clear market demands – cameras and remote controls. He especially cared about the response speed. For example, for the remote – control product, they made a product prototype in three months and showed the first – generation product to customers five months later.
But the real market gave him a lesson – the first – generation product was thick and unattractive in appearance, and the first batch of samples failed even before entering the market. “We always thought that as long as the efficiency was high, we could open up the market. Unexpectedly, what customers really need is something good – looking, lightweight, and cost – effective.” Recalling that stage, Feng Fan said bluntly that he was too idealistic.
Internally, they were promoting multiple product types in a “spreading – out” way. In addition to the obtained demands, as long as Feng Fan sensed potential demands, he would feedback them to the production line for sampling.
“We are still young and not afraid of trying. I think whether a product can be implemented is to keep promoting the experiment until it reaches a dead end.” Feng Fan roughly estimated that hundreds of products have been tested on the product side.

To some extent, a large variety of products is a “big taboo” in the manufacturing industry. Usually, the process from the laboratory stage to the pilot – production stage is completely different. The production process strictly tests the coupling process between equipment. Some very small problems will be magnified on the pilot – production line. This is just the first hurdle. It often takes another two to three weeks from customer trial, feedback, to adjustment.
The team couldn’t find a focus for a while. In the second half of 2024, Yanhe Technology had to enter a “combat – ready” state.
Feng Fan was looking for money while promoting product implementation. The production line operated in three shifts around the clock. “The workers worked in batches, and we also stayed on the production line. Sometimes, just to test the influence of the light – source distance on efficiency, we had to conduct repeated experiments until midnight.”
That year, Feng Fan was racing against time. He went to Shenzhen more than 70 times. The process was extremely painful. “Sometimes, the product that took two weeks to improve was reported as unqualified by customers right after they tried it.”
It wasn’t until the end of 2024 that Yanhe Technology got on the right track – the first batch of products were finally finalized, put into the production line, and began to be stably delivered. In February 2025, Yanhe Technology reached an important turning point. It promoted the construction of a 100MW (megawatt) mass – production line in Hunan and officially put it into production in August. At the same time, the company completed a Series A investment of over 100 million yuan.
In Feng Fan’s entrepreneurial history, he has always been making choices between ideal and reality. Soon, production – line management and personnel management made him hit another “barrier.”
By the end of 2024, the team had expanded to more than 30 people, and after the factory was put into production, the number soared to more than a hundred. Although Feng Fan and Peng Zongyang participated in the recruitment process as much as possible, there were still contradictions between the thinking mode of the original “top – student team” and the actual needs.
The founding team of Yanhe Technology mainly consisted of R & D personnel with high enthusiasm and professionalism. Feng Fan’s management style is an “aggressive” offensive approach – wanting everything. He cares about the coverage and also pursues results and speed. But previously, the whole team was in sync, and the atmosphere was great. Everyone trusted each other based on their abilities, cooperated with each other, and the efficiency was extremely high.
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Sungrow launches CEC-approved PowerKeeper Series in Australia – pv magazine Australia

Chinese solar inverter and storage solutions company Sungrow has launched its CEC-approved PowerKeeper Series in Australia for commercial and industrial applications.
Image: Sungrow
Chinese solar inverter and storage solutions company Sungrow has launched its Clean Energy Council (CEC)-approved PowerKeeper Series ACE 007 and ACE Profit in Australia for commercial and industrial applications.
Sungrow said the compact DC‑coupled solution built on a fully modular design delivers zero waste in both investment and green energy utilisation, zero outage for commercial operations, and a seamless experience through 7Ups across installation, operation, and long‑term performance.
Highlights include scalable designs from 50–1,000 kWh per inverter with precise capacity matching, elimination of oversizing AC capacity and reduced upfront investment.
The Powerkeeper Series features 10 ms seamless switching for uninterrupted operation that delivers fast, stable backup for diverse loads—so critical operations can ride through grid disturbances with minimal impact.

The company said a key innovation is dual-inverter backup, which pairs up to two inverters to run backup together as one system, “sharing load automatically and delivering a cleaner, more predictable outcome on site.”
The result is continuity-focused performance and simplified backup integration for installers.
The series also features built‑in ATS that supports up to 220 kW without extra hardware and robust protection (IP66, C5, 50 cm water resistance).
Long-term reliability is backed by 5D alerts and triple-layer safety, revenue is maximised by artificial intelligence (AI) operating modes, and multiple applications are supported, including self-consumption, arbitrage, and grid services.

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Town of East Windsor appealing state's approval of solar panel project expansion – fox61.com

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A 24/7 solar farm-building robot just hit the market – Electrek

The US needs a lot more electricity fast, and one company thinks robots can help build it quicker.
Berkeley, California-based Terabase Energy says its next-gen Terafab automated solar construction system has finished field testing and is now ready to ship commercially. Terafab V2 brings autonomous robotics and AI into the way massive solar farms are built.
Electricity demand in the US is rising again, largely because of data centers and AI. Tech giants are building massive server farms and need power around the clock.
Utility-scale solar paired with battery storage is still one of the fastest and cheapest ways to add new electricity. But building those projects isn’t simple. Solar farms can stretch across thousands of acres and require millions of panels and components, much of which is still installed by hand.
That creates bottlenecks. Labor shortages, delays, and rising costs are slowing projects down at the exact moment the grid needs more power.
Terabase says its Terafab solar robot system is designed to fix that by automating construction, tightening quality control, and speeding up the timeline from groundbreaking to grid connection.
CEO and co-founder Matt Campbell put it this way: “Every week we shave off a construction schedule means earlier revenue for project owners, lower financing costs, and faster delivery of clean electrons to the grid.”
Automation is nothing new in factories, but construction sites are a different story. They’re messy, unpredictable, and exposed to the elements.
Terabase says it spent years developing a system that can handle real-world conditions – from desert dust and extreme heat to wind, rain, and mud – while still delivering factory-level precision.
The result is Terafab V2, which combines robotics, real-time decision-making, and autonomous operation to build solar farms quickly and efficiently.
A single Terafab line can install solar equipment on a two-minute cycle. Running continuously, that adds up to more than 20 megawatts installed per week – or around 1 gigawatt per factory year.
The biggest change is how the system approaches installation.
Normally, crews install steel torque tubes first, then manually attach heavy solar panels one by one. Terafab flips that process.
Instead, panels are pre-assembled onto the torque tubes with built-in quality checks at every step. That means defects can be caught immediately instead of later in the field.
It also eliminates the need for workers to lift heavy glass and steel components, improving safety and making it easier to keep working in extreme heat.
Once assembled, specialized rovers move the completed units into place. Terabase says it expects those rovers to become fully autonomous in the near future.
Terafab’s Manufacturing Execution System (MES) software continuously manages and optimizes the entire build using AI.
Terabase says its Terafab V1 system has already been used on five solar projects, and claims developers reported higher productivity, better build quality, and improved safety.
That matters because labor shortages are one of the biggest constraints on scaling solar right now. If construction speeds up, developers can take on more projects at once.
The company is now ready to scale.
Over the next year, Terabase plans to build out factory capacity at its Northern California facility, which can support up to 10 GW of installations annually.
The solar robot system is designed and manufactured in the US, positioning it as both a clean energy and domestic manufacturing play.
Campbell summed it up: “The companies building the AI-powered future need electricity at a scale and speed that the construction industry has never delivered before. We’ve developed Terafab to close that gap.”
Read more: The world added a record 814 GW of wind + solar – reshaping energy fast
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LONGi Ranked Tier 1 Module and Storage Manufacturer by BloombergNEF – Longi

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Recently, BloombergNEF (BNEF), a world-renowned authoritative research institution in the energy sector, successively released the Q1 2026 rankings of Global PV Module and Energy Storage System Manufacturer Tiering. Reinforced by its outstanding financial reliability and excellent global market performance, LONGi was once again named a Tier 1 PV module manufacturer and made its debut on the Tier 1 energy storage list. This dual recognition marks LONGi’s pivot from a global leader in photovoltaics to an integrated energy solution provider of “PV+Storage+Hydrogen Energy”.
 
Dual Tier 1 Certifications: A Testament to Strength
BloombergNEF’s tiering system is renowned for its rigor and neutrality, serving as a critical reference for investment, financing and procurement in global new energy projects. It explicitly requires manufacturers to own independent production facilities and conduct sales under their own brand names.
LONGi’s consistent recognition on the PV Tier 1 list attests to the company’s strong global brand credibility and competitive advantages in the photovoltaic sector.
The BNEF Tier 1 selection criteria for the energy storage sector are equally rigorous: rating hundreds of global stationary energy storage manufacturers with transparent tiering based on financeability proven by project deployment. Brands on the list must possess independent manufacturing plants and have supplied batteries and energy storage systems for projects with a capacity of at least 10 MW or 10 MWh in the past two years.
LONGi’s successful debut on the list at its first attempt fully demonstrates the high starting point and strong market recognition of its energy storage business.
 
The “Stability Triangle” Empowering Transition
In November 2025, LONGi launched its one-stop energy storage solutions in the UK. Dennis She, Vice President of LONGi, elaborated on the company’s energy storage strategy in detail and proposed an energy architecture of the “Stability Triangle” with photovoltaics, energy storage and hydrogen energy at its core.
“Photovoltaics is the creator of clean energy, and energy storage acts as the stabilizer of power systems, and hydrogen energy is the regulator for balancing energy systems,” noted Dennis She. “The synergy of the three will build a truly accessible, highly resilient and affordable zero-carbon energy system.”
At present, LONGi has accumulated leading technologies in photovoltaics and hydrogen energy. Its HIBC solar cell has achieved a conversion efficiency of 27.81%, and the company ranks first in the world in ALK electrolyzer production capacity. The launch of its energy storage business further completes LONGi’s strategic layout of the entire industrial chain for “PV+Storage+ Hydrogen Energy.”
LONGi’s “PV+Storage+ Hydrogen Energy integration” strategy has yielded remarkable results in market expansion.
 
About LONGi
Founded in 2000, LONGi is committed to being the world’s leading solar technology company, focusing on customer-driven value creation for full scenario energy transformation.
Under its mission of ‘making the best of solar energy to build a green world’, LONGi has dedicated itself to technology innovation and established five business sectors, covering mono silicon wafers cells and modules, commercial and industrial distributed solar solutions, green energy solutions and hydrogen equipment. The company has honed its capabilities to provide green energy and has more recently embraced green hydrogen products and solutions to support global zero carbon development. www.longi.com/US

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Jacksonville needs real solutions, not a pricey gas plant – The Invading Sea

By Martin Taylor
Jacksonville is in an affordability crisis, and JEA (as our public utility) should be part of the solution — not making electricity even more expensive by committing billions of dollars to a new natural gas power plant
As a solar owner, I’ve spent years helping neighbors understand their energy choices, especially seniors, working families and veterans living on fixed incomes. I’ve seen firsthand how rising electric bills strain household budgets. That’s why I oppose JEA’s decision to pursue an oversized, risky new gas plant.
Last August, JEA’s board approved plans for a 675-megawatt natural gas plant with a price tag of $1.57 billion. This figure is already 139% higher than the utility’s original estimate due to supply chain problems and construction delays. 
Even more troubling, an independent analysis by the Rocky Mountain Institute finds that this project could ultimately cost customers up to $2.5 billion more than cleaner, less volatile alternatives like utility-scale solar, battery storage and energy efficiency. 
Gas turbines are in short supply nationwide, pushing costs higher and delaying projects across the country. For this plant, the timeline has already slipped by at least two years (from 2029 to 2031) leaving customers exposed to fuel price spikes in the meantime. These are exactly the kinds of risks utilities are supposed to protect customers from, not lock us into — again 
What makes this especially frustrating is that better options are readily available. According to the Rocky Mountain Institute’s analysis, portfolios built around utility-scale solar, energy storage and efficiency can meet Jacksonville’s reliability needs at lower cost and with far less financial risk. Clean energy alternatives outperformed the gas plant once updated market conditions were taken into account.  
Even JEA did not dispute the report’s technical findings; it simply disagreed with the conclusions. 
Solar power has become one of the cheapest sources of new electricity generation. It can be deployed faster than gas plants, avoids fuel price volatility entirely and produces no harmful emissions. Just as importantly, Jacksonville should be expanding access to customer-owned solar.  
Restoring fair net metering — known as rooftop solar credits — would allow customers to receive credit for the electricity they generate and feed it back into the grid. 
Net metering is a proven policy that lowers bills, strengthens grid resilience and keeps energy dollars circulating locally. I can say from personal experience and without hesitation that distributed solar paired with battery storage improves household affordability. These benefits multiply when more customers are allowed to participate, while also providing backup power during major storms. 
Restricting net metering does the opposite: It discourages local investment and limits consumer choice, while harming residents and local businesses.  
Jacksonville residents are still paying for past mistakes and JEA customers currently face higher bills tied to debt from Georgia’s Plant Vogtle nuclear project, which ballooned to roughly double its original cost. Building another large, delay-prone power plant risks repeating history at a time when families can least afford it.
Beyond repeating history, there are real health and economic risks. Fossil fuel generation today contributes to air pollution that worsens asthma and other respiratory conditions, which drives up health care costs. Clean energy alternatives reduce these risks while creating hundreds of millions of dollars in local economic benefits that can’t be outsourced.  
Jacksonville deserves an energy strategy that reflects today’s realities, not yesterday’s assumptions. Investing billions in a new gas plant makes no sense when cheaper, cleaner and more flexible alternatives are available. JEA should pause this project, update its analysis, restore net metering, accelerate utility-scale solar and battery storage and expand energy efficiency programs. 
We don’t have to choose between reliability and affordability. We can have both — if JEA is willing to choose a future that works for the people it serves, not against them.
Martin Taylor is an Air Force veteran and a proud solar owner. He lives in Jacksonville. This opinion piece was originally published by the Florida Times-Union, which is a media partner of The Invading Sea. Banner photo: A natural gas power plant (iStock image). 
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Strategy for outdated PV panels refined – China Daily – Global Edition

By Zheng Xin | China Daily | Updated: 2026-03-20 09:21
China has unveiled a comprehensive strategic roadmap to tackle the looming “retirement wave” of solar panels, aiming to transform waste management into a high-tech circular economy.
Six government departments, led by the Ministry of Industry and Information Technology, recently issued the guiding opinions on promoting the comprehensive utilization of photovoltaic modules.
This signals a decisive shift toward standardized, large-scale recycling as the nation’s early solar installations reach the end of their 25-to-30-year life spans, said industry experts.
“China leads the world in PV installation capacity, and early modules are now entering their retirement phase,” said Pan Helin, a member of the Expert Committee for Information and Communication Economy, which is part of the MIIT.
Pan said that if handled improperly, it could result in significant resource waste.
The industry currently faces bottlenecks like high costs, technical complexity and a lack of unified standards, making State guidance essential to build a robust disposal system, he added.
According to the guiding opinions, by 2027, China aims to reach a cumulative recycling volume of 250,000 metric tons of PV modules, supported by breakthroughs in key technologies such as layer separation and component extraction.
By 2030, the nation expects to have a fully integrated industrial chain capable of handling a massive surge in decommissioned equipment, it said.
Industry data underscore the urgency of this policy. According to the China Photovoltaic Industry Association, after 2030, the volume of retired PV modules is expected to reach approximately 1.4 million tons, or about 18 gigawatts.
By 2040, this figure is projected to skyrocket to 20 million tons, equivalent to 253 GW of capacity, it said.
This tidal wave of waste carries immense economic potential.
According to estimates by the 2024 White Paper on China’s Photovoltaic Recycling and Circular Utilization, the cumulative market scale for PV recycling will reach approximately 26 billion yuan ($3.6 billion) by 2030.
As the volume of retired panels continues to grow, this market could balloon to 420 billion yuan by 2050, it said.
The new guidelines emphasize “green design” from the manufacturing stage. Producers are encouraged to use materials that are easier to disassemble and separate.
Furthermore, the policy promotes the use of recycled materials — including PV frames and glass — in the production of new modules, fostering a closed-loop system.
According to Cinda Securities, in terms of processing, the industry is moving toward “thermal decomposition”, which offers shorter reaction times and higher recovery rates compared to traditional physical or chemical methods.
However, this technology currently requires significant investment and suffers from a fragmented market landscape lacking large-scale leaders, it said.
The prevalence of illegal recycling channels remains a significant challenge. The CPIA said that of the 1.2 million tons of modules expected to be retired by 2025, formal enterprises with environmental qualifications currently have an annual capacity of only 300,000 tons.
This leaves a 900,000-ton gap that often flows into “small workshops”. These unlicensed operators compete on low prices, but could cause severe environmental damage due to a lack of protective measures.
To counter this, the government plans to nurture “backbone” enterprises and “little giants”, or outstanding specialized, high-tech small and medium-sized enterprises.
Financial institutions are also being guided to provide credit support for green technical upgrades and recycling projects.
“For manufacturers, this is an opportunity for industrial upgrading. For recycling firms, it is a chance to build a ‘moat’ through technological exploration. Ultimately, this ensures that the retirement of old tech facilitates high-quality development through the adoption of more efficient, new-generation solar products,” Pan said.

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Tesla's Solar Move Sparks Photovoltaic Surge in China – Devdiscourse

Shares in Mainland China edged higher on Friday, surpassing the significant 4,000-point threshold, buoyed by a boost in photovoltaic stocks. This uptick stemmed from a Reuters report that automotive giant Tesla is in talks to procure solar equipment from Chinese firms.
At midday, the Shanghai Composite index experienced a minor rise of 0.16%, accompanied by a near 1% increase in the blue-chip CSI300 Index. Notably, photovoltaic shares surged, with the sector’s sub-index climbing by 4.8% following news of Tesla’s sought $2.9 billion worth of solar gear, including contributions from Suzhou Maxwell Technologies.
In a broader financial context, China’s central bank assured readiness to employ its financial tools to maintain market stability amidst escalating geopolitical tensions and energy cost concerns, adding strain to global financial systems.
(With inputs from agencies.)
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Tesla's Ambitious Solar Vision: U.S. Manufacturing Relies on Chinese Equipment – Devdiscourse

Tesla is making a significant move to expand its solar panel manufacturing capabilities in the United States by planning a $2.9 billion purchase of equipment from Chinese suppliers, sources say. This ambitious step is part of CEO Elon Musk’s vision to add 100 gigawatts of solar capacity across the nation.
Suzhou Maxwell Technologies, a major player in the solar equipment industry, is poised to be a primary supplier, with other Chinese firms like Shenzhen S.C New Energy Technology and Laplace Renewable Energy Technology also under consideration. Export approvals are in the process, but the timeline remains unclear.
This order reflects the U.S.’s challenge in balancing domestic manufacturing with global trade dynamics. While tariffs restrict many Chinese imports, solar equipment has been exempted to foster local production. As Tesla navigates these complex dynamics, its reliance on Chinese suppliers underscores the intertwined nature of global supply chains.
(With inputs from agencies.)
Email: info@devdiscourse.com
Phone: +91-720-6444012, +91-7027739813, 14, 15
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IPP Energía Aljaval plans 2.1 GW solar and BESS pipeline in Mexico – Strategic Energy Europe

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The board of directors of Spanish renewable energy developer Energía Aljaval has approved its 2026–2027 Strategic Plan, placing Mexico at the centre of the company’s global expansion strategy.
The plan includes eight utility-scale renewable energy projects combining solar photovoltaic (PV) generation and battery energy storage systems (BESS), with a total capacity of more than 2.1 GW. The portfolio is designed to capitalise on the rapid industrial expansion driven by nearshoring, as international companies relocate manufacturing operations closer to North American markets.
After more than a decade of continuous presence in Mexico since 2013, the company aims to position itself as a key player in the country’s next phase of the energy transition and renewable power investment.
As a first operational milestone under the new plan, Energía Aljaval has formally submitted four photovoltaic projects — Pinos, General Cepeda, Santa Lucía and Chapote — to the VUPE (Single Window for Strategic Energy Sector Projects), a regulatory platform designed to streamline permitting and grid-connection procedures for large energy developments.
These projects are located in strategic regions characterised by high solar irradiation and strong industrial electricity demand, supporting both grid integration and future power purchase agreements (PPAs) with large energy consumers.
Four of these projects already have official grid-connection applications registered in the VUPE system, marking a key step towards development approval.
All eight assets follow a unified development schedule, with the goal of reaching Ready-to-Build (RTB) status by the end of 2027 and achieving Commercial Operation Date (COD) by December 2029.
A defining feature of the portfolio is the integration of battery energy storage systems (BESS) across all projects.
Each facility will incorporate storage capacity equivalent to 30% of its installed power, representing more than 500 MW of battery storage in total.
This hybrid configuration is expected to unlock additional revenue streams through:
Capacity markets
Ancillary grid services
Energy arbitrage and peak-shaving
Such capabilities improve grid flexibility and reliability, while also enhancing the financial bankability of renewable assets in increasingly competitive electricity markets.
The new strategic roadmap builds on Energía Aljaval’s long-standing presence in the Mexican energy sector.
Since receiving its first authorisations from the Mexican Energy Regulatory Commission (CRE) in 2014, the company has brought hundreds of megawatts of solar capacity into commercial operation, including projects such as El Trece Solar and Torrencitos in the state of Chihuahua.
In total, the company has already delivered more than 660 MW of installed renewable capacity connected to Mexico’s national grid across previous development phases.
Globally, the group operates over 900 MW of renewable energy capacity in Latin America and continues to expand its development pipeline in Europe and Brazil, reinforcing its execution capabilities for the projects now advancing towards the RTB stage.
According to the company’s management, the strategy goes beyond simply developing renewable capacity.
“At Energía Aljaval we do not only develop megawatts; we structure comprehensive solutions for firm and clean energy supply. Our continuous presence in Mexico since 2013 has given us the resilience and local expertise to deliver a mature, bankable portfolio of more than 2.1 GW ready to support the country’s new industrial growth,” the company stated.
The recent submission of the Pinos, General Cepeda, Santa Lucía and Chapote projects through the VUPE platform, executives added, demonstrates that the company is prepared to move forward with execution.
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The company will supply batteries for Central Puerto projects in the Buenos Aires metropolitan area (AMBA), which are set to become the largest energy storage development in the country. Speaking at FES Argentina, Lucas Ponce said the main opportunities for the sector will be linked to CAMMESA, as the market launches the new Alma SADI tender.
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by Keep reading
The company will supply batteries for Central Puerto projects in the Buenos Aires metropolitan area (AMBA), which are set to become the largest energy storage development in the country. Speaking at FES Argentina, Lucas Ponce said the main opportunities for the sector will be linked to CAMMESA, as the market launches the new Alma SADI tender.
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Edify Energy awards EPC contracts for 1.8 GW of solar and storage in Australia – pv magazine International

Edify Energy will start construction proper of two massive solar and battery energy storage projects in Queensland, Australia, by mid-year after naming DT Infrastructure as its preferred engineering, procurement and construction (EPC) contractor.
Image: Edify Energy
From pv magazine Australia
Renewables developer Edify Energy has awarded Gamuda company DT Infrastructure the EPC contracts for its Smoky Creek and Guthrie’s Gap and Ganymirra and Majors Creek solar and battery projects in regional Queensland.
The adjacent Smoky Creek and Guthrie’s Gap power stations, near Biloela in central Queensland, will together feature 600 MW of solar and 600 MW/2,400 MWh of battery storage.
The co-located Ganymirra and Majors Creek power stations, being developed near Townsville in the state’s north, include a combined 300 MW of solar and 300 MW/1,200 MWh of battery energy storage.
Sydney-based Edify Energy, now owned by Canadian investment group La Caisse, said both projects will use DC-coupled hybrid configurations and utilize grid-forming inverter technologies designed to enhance the stability and resilience of the power network.
Edify Energy Chief Executive Ben Warne expects the developments to make a major contribution to the National Electricity Market with the adoption of the best and latest in solar, battery and inverter technology to bring stable and dispatchable solar energy to the network in the most efficient way possible.
“We are proud of the significant role these major generators will play in the transition towards an affordable, reliable and sustainable energy future,” he said, adding the projects will also provide meaningful injections into the local regional economies. “These projects will create significant jobs during construction, support local communities and industry and assist in delivering the infrastructure needs of Queensland’s energy system consistent with the Queensland Energy Roadmap.”
While construction proper is expected to start in the coming months, Edify Energy said early pre-construction and design works have already commenced on both projects. The developer is targeting delivery and operations in 2028.
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Global Solar Concentrated Photovoltaic Market Size, Growth, Trends & Forecast to 2033 Zytech Solar, Silex, Magpower – openPR.com

Solar Concentrated Photovoltaic
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Sunsure Energy Signs Solar PPA With JAKSON Engineering Limited To Power Noida Operations – SolarQuarter

Sunsure Energy Signs Solar PPA With JAKSON Engineering Limited To Power Noida Operations  SolarQuarter
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Sunsure to supply solar power to Jakson Engineering in India – Renewables Now

Sunsure to supply solar power to Jakson Engineering in India  Renewables Now
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Dexter council approves solar ordinance – Piscataquis Observer




DEXTER — Following several years of work, the Dexter Town Council has approved a solar ordinance prohibiting the installation of new commercial medium-scale and large-scale solar energy systems. The ordinance allows and regulates private small-scale systems for residential use while protecting public health, safety, welfare, scenic resources and neighboring property values.
“After the November election residents said no more commercial solar farms in Dexter and that is the intention of this ordinance,” Council Chair Marcia Delaware said during a March 19 meeting about last fall’s advisory referendum. More than 70% of voters voted against allowing more commercial solar in town.
Five projects already started are grandfathered.
The town currently has a moratorium on commercial solar arrays in place through the spring.
Last year Town Manager Trampas King met with legal counsel to look at specific differences between commercial and residential solar arrays in terms of municipal ordinances.
Questions concerned the size of larger residential solar systems, which could potentially cover more land than commercial outfits and still be exempt from the ordinance, and the definitions of medium and larger arrays.
In March 2025 the council extended a moratorium on commercial solar arrays for another year as the planning board develops the more comprehensive ordinance to regulate what kind of developments would be permitted in town,
The latest moratorium was put in place for a year, as opposed to a previous moratorium that was only 180 days. It is the second time the moratorium has been extended since first going into effect in May 2024. 
With the moratorium in place, the town can temporarily pause any new solar farm development while more permanent measures are developed. The moratorium is based on the development’s size, and does not apply to solar panels that homeowners or small businesses may install. 
Councilors also approved a sign ordinance. 
Delaware said the ordinance will eradicate the yard sale look of numerous signs on the lawn in front of the post office near the Spring and Main Street traffic light.
The ordinance specifies procedures for sign posting on town property.
In other business, King said he is meeting with department heads to go over the 2026-2027 budget. The council will be holding budget meetings in May and June to develop the next fiscal year’s finances. 
Nine contestants entered The Friends of the Dexter Meeting House’s second annual chili cookoff at the First Universalist Church earlier in the month with over 40 taste testers, King reported. 
“It went really well and seemed to have had a lot of fun,” he said.
On a Sunday in early May — the exact date will be announced — Dexter is looking to hold its annual clean-up day. 
“It’s a good time so come on down and help clean up the town,” King said. “It’s only a few hours and it makes our town look a lot better.”
Food is provided by Hannaford and members of the fire department cook lunch.
The council accepted a grant and monetary donation.
The town applied for funding from Heart of Maine United Way and was awarded $6,500. King said $5,000 will go toward residents’ heating equipment repairs and the other $1,500 is for oil.
The Hartley Charitable Foundation continued its annual giving with $1,800 gifted to the town. When asked, King was not yet sure what the $1,800 would be used for.

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Lego plans 30,700-panel solar array at its new Virginia factory site – Interesting Engineering

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LEGO’s first U.S. factory in Virginia will feature a 22 MW solar array, rooftop panels, and a carbon-neutral design.
The LEGO Group is doubling down on clean energy as it builds out its first U.S. manufacturing hub in Chesterfield County, Virginia, pairing large-scale solar generation with a carbon-conscious factory design.
The company plans to install a massive ground-mounted solar array alongside its upcoming LEGO Manufacturing Virginia site, signaling a broader push to align industrial operations with renewable energy targets in the United States.
The move places LEGO among a growing group of manufacturers investing directly in on-site clean energy to stabilize costs and reduce emissions.
LEGO will begin construction on the solar park this summer. The installation will span nearly 80 acres and include more than 30,700 ground-mounted panels. Together, they will deliver a peak capacity of 22 megawatts.
The solar park forms a core part of the company’s strategy to power the site entirely with renewable energy. It also reflects a broader industry shift toward energy independence and localized generation.
Beyond the ground array, LEGO will install rooftop solar systems across its buildings. These systems will include 10,080 panels and add another 6.11 MWp of capacity.
Combined, the two systems create a hybrid on-site energy model. This setup reduces reliance on grid electricity and provides a buffer against energy price volatility. It also improves operational continuity during grid disruptions.
Engineers are expected to integrate smart energy management systems. These systems will balance production loads with solar output throughout the day.
The Virginia facility represents LEGO’s first manufacturing footprint in the United States. The company announced the $1.5 billion project in 2022.
The site covers 340 acres and includes 13 buildings. These feature molding and packing units, office spaces, an energy center, and a high-bay automated warehouse.
LEGO designed the factory to operate as a carbon-neutral facility. It plans to match 100% of its energy use with renewable sources. Engineers also focused on reducing energy consumption across operations.
The company is integrating efficiency into both structure and process. This includes optimizing building orientation, insulation, and advanced climate control systems.
Automation will play a key role inside the facility. The high-bay warehouse will rely on automated systems to streamline storage and distribution.
Sustainability efforts extend beyond power generation. LEGO aims to achieve zero waste from factory to landfill at the Virginia site.
The company also targets LEED Platinum certification. This rating reflects performance across energy, water, and material use.
Notably, LEGO is using mass timber for office construction. This renewable material stores carbon rather than emitting it during production. It also lowers the overall carbon footprint of the buildings.
Water efficiency systems and waste reduction processes will also support sustainability goals. These include recycling programs and efficient resource management across operations.
The combination of solar infrastructure and low-carbon materials positions the site as a next-generation manufacturing model. It blends industrial scale with environmental accountability.
As construction progresses, the Virginia project could serve as a blueprint for future LEGO facilities. It also underscores how global brands are reshaping U.S. manufacturing through clean energy investments.
Aamir is a seasoned tech journalist with experience at Exhibit Magazine, Republic World, and PR Newswire. With a deep love for all things tech and science, he has spent years decoding the latest innovations and exploring how they shape industries, lifestyles, and the future of humanity.
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All sectors surged! Tesla plans to purchase 20 billion yuan worth of Chinese photovoltaic equipment, with the contract size reaching gigawatt-level. – 富途牛牛

All sectors surged! Tesla plans to purchase 20 billion yuan worth of Chinese photovoltaic equipment, with the contract size reaching gigawatt-level.  富途牛牛
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Ohio Denies Agrivoltaic Solar Farm: Crossroads Project Rejected – News and Statistics – IndexBox

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The Ohio Power Siting Board has unanimously denied approval for a proposed agrivoltaic solar facility in Morrow County, according to Solar Power World. The project, named Crossroads Solar Grazing Center, was planned for 570 acres and would have combined solar power generation with sheep grazing operations.
Open Road Renewables initially sought permits for the development in early 2025, with construction anticipated to begin in 2027. The proposal faced significant local opposition during recent public comment periods, including submissions under false identities. Despite earlier progress in the permitting process, the board voted against the project.
During the same meeting, the regulatory board approved a three-year waiver for a natural gas provider and made amendments to certificates for other energy storage and solar proposals. A separate state utilities commission also authorized a rate increase for customers of a specific utility on the same day.
A non-voting state senator expressed concern that rejecting solar projects could lead to higher energy costs for consumers, stating that such denials might negatively impact both affordability and reliability of power. An environmental policy director criticized the decision, arguing that prioritizing the quantity of public comments over their factual basis undermines regulatory certainty and hampers the development of needed energy infrastructure.
Separately, state legislators are considering a bill that would redefine clean energy sources under state law to include nuclear power and natural gas, while excluding wind, solar, and energy storage technologies. That legislation is currently under committee review.
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China’s Solar Systems Aid Boosts Cuban Health Centers – Orinoco Tribune

Orinoco Tribune – News and opinion pieces about Venezuela and beyond
From Venezuela and made by Venezuelan Chavistas
Beyond the hospital network of more than 280 hospitals and 430 polyclinics, the project will also reach some 2,000 homes in isolated rural areas that historically lack stable access to electricity. Photo: Adelante Newspaper.
The Cuban Government, with China’s support, is rapidly deploying 5,000 solar systems, focused on hospitals, polyclinics and maternal homes, as well as water pumping stations and telecommunications nodes, to combat a severe energy crisis exacerbated by U.S. sanctions.
Cuba is rapidly deploying 5,000 solar systems, donated by China, in vital health centers across its 168 municipalities to combat a severe energy crisis exacerbated by U.S. sanctions, ensuring critical medical services remain operational.
Amidst the complex energy crisis currently gripping the island, the Government of Cuba has launched an accelerated plan to equip its vital health centers with advanced solar technology.
This national program includes the installation of 5,000 photovoltaic systems, generously donated by the People’s Republic of China, with more than 2,600 being prioritized for strategic institutions across the country’s municipalities.
Each 2-kilowatt kit comprises solar panels, inverters, and storage batteries. This technical configuration is crucial for guaranteeing that essential medical equipment and the refrigeration of medicines continue to function autonomously during frequent power interruptions.
Text reads:
“March 12, Wang Yi, Political Bureau’s member of the Central Committee of the Chinese Communist Party and Chinese Foreign Minister, answered the phone call from @BrunoRguezP, member of the Political Bureau’s member of the Central Committee of the Cuban Communist Party and Cuban FM, who explained the current situation and appreciated the support from China. Both agreed to continue to foster bilateral ties.”
Authorities from the Cuban Electric Union (UNE, in Spanish) explained that this initiative seeks to diversify the nation’s energy matrix and reinforce resilience in a scenario marked by acute fuel scarcity. The deployment is currently concentrated in hospitals, polyclinics, and maternal homes, in addition to water pumping stations and telecommunications nodes, safeguarding essential services for the population.
Cuba Opens Its Economy to Emigrants Amid US-Promoted Energy Crisis

Beyond the existing hospital network, which includes over 280 hospitals and 430 polyclinics, the project will also extend to approximately 2,000 isolated rural homes that have historically lacked stable access to electricity.
Text reads:
“On the reinstatement of the National Electrical System, we update: The system has already been connected from Pinar del Rio to Santiago de Cuba. Conditions are being prepared to bring electricity to Granma and Guantanamo provinces.”
Cuban Energy Strategy
The current strategy aligns with a global trend of decentralizing energy infrastructure to shield sensitive sectors, ensuring that basic services like health and potable water do not depend exclusively on the national grid during emergencies.
This ambitious plan unfolds against a backdrop where the Donald Trump Administration had pushed its “maximum pressure” strategy against Cuba to a breaking point, centering its offensive on the complete strangulation of the national energy system. Washington imposed an oil blockade, aggressively pursuing any nation or shipping company that supplied crude oil to the island. The Cuban Government consistently denounced this measure as “collective punishment”, asserting that it flagrantly violates international law and the fundamental freedom of commerce.
This energy blockade has had a devastating impact on the country’s critical infrastructure. After more than three months without the arrival of oil tankers, electricity generation plummeted to minimum levels, triggering massive blackouts. These outages not only plunged homes into darkness but also paralyzed vital services, immersing the population in a severe humanitarian crisis induced from the Oval Office.
While the U.S. President boasted to the press that he “could do whatever he wanted” with Cuba and that the island was reaching “the end of the road”, the reality on the ground revealed a deliberate attempt to force the so-called “regime change” through logistical asphyxiation.
In this challenging geopolitical and economic landscape, Cuba’s proactive implementation of solar solutions with Chinese support represents a crucial step towards bolstering its health infrastructure and achieving greater energy sovereignty.
 
(Telesur)

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The photovoltaic, energy storage, and new energy sectors in the Hong Kong stock market have shown strong performance against the trend as the industry enters its traditional peak season with tightening supply and demand. – 富途牛牛

The photovoltaic, energy storage, and new energy sectors in the Hong Kong stock market have shown strong performance against the trend as the industry enters its traditional peak season with tightening supply and demand.  富途牛牛
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Ohio power board cancels 94-MW agrivoltaic solar project – Solar Power World

Solar Power World
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The Ohio Power Siting Board (OPSB) voted unanimously to deny the construction of a 94-MW agrivoltaic solar project proposed for Morrow County, Ohio.
Sheep graze between solar module rows at a Silicon Ranch project site. Silicon Ranch
Open Road Renewables was developing the co-located Crossroads Solar Grazing Center on 570 acres of land sited between Cardington, Lincoln and Westfield Townships. The solar project would have been built on several different plots in Morrow County and hosted a sheep grazing operation. Open Road initially filed for project permitting in February 2025, with a project timeline to start construction in 2027 and start operations in 2028.
Crossroads had reportedly progressed through the permitting process toward possible approval, but was met with local opposition during public comment periods in the last few months. Most of the comments submitted anonymously during this period opposed Crossroads’ construction, and Canary Media reported that 34 other comments in opposition were submitted under false names.
“[The Ohio Environmental Council] intervened in this case to ensure that decisions are based on facts, fairness and the long-term interests of Ohioans. When objective analysis is overridden, and the volume of public input is prioritized over its substance, it weakens trust in the process and makes it harder to build the energy system Ohio needs,” said Nolan Rutschilling, managing director of energy policy for the Ohio Environmental Council. “To put it plainly: Ohio needs more clean energy generation now to address soaring costs tied to data centers and geopolitical pressures on energy supply chains. Staff’s last-minute reversal on this decision creates an uncertain regulatory environment that will discourage energy developers from future investment.”
While the OPSB voted unanimously to oppose Crossroads’ continued development, non-voting member State Sen. Kent Smith said he’s concerned that the board would deny a solar project during a time of rising energy costs. During the same session, OPSB voted to approve an extended three-year waiver with natural gas provider Columbia Gas of Ohio, and amended certificates for proposed energy storage and solar projects. On Wednesday, the Public Utilities Commission of Ohio (PUCO) also approved a rate increase for utility customers with AEP Ohio.
“The goal of the PUCO and this organization is to have both adequate supply and affordable power supply, and if we’re going to deny solar the ability to compete in Ohio’s marketplace, I think that’s going to result in an artificially high price for Ohio consumers … I’m concerned that this project was initially approved and was eventually denied. I think this is a dangerous thing for the state in terms of both affordability and reliability,” Smith said.
Another source of solar opposition is happening in state legislature. State Sens. George Lang (R-52) and Mark Romanchuk (R-22) have co-authored a bill that if passed would alter Ohio’s definition of a “clean energy source,” which does not include wind, energy storage or solar power. SB 294 would consider nuclear power and natural gas as clean energy sources. The bill is currently under review by a Senate committee.
Billy Ludt is managing editor of Solar Power World and currently covers topics on mounting, inverters, installation and operations.








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Sandia Labs benchmarks PV software providers in first ever blind comparison analysis – pv magazine International

Sandia National Laboratories conducted the first-ever blind comparison of seven commercial PV modeling software, revealing that differences in weather handling, system modeling, derates, and assumptions grow as system complexity increases. The study emphasizes that software choice should consider project complexity, workflow, and modeling features rather than relying on rankings alone.
Image: pv magazine
A group of scientists from the U.S. Department of Energy’s Sandia National Laboratories has conducted a comprehensive assessment of seven PV modeling software tools – 3E SynaptiQ, PlantPredict, PVsyst, RatedPower, SAM, SolarFarmer, and Solargis Evaluate – and has found that their performance diverges as system complexity increases.”
“This is the first ever blind and independent comparison of commercially used PV software, with predictions submitted directly by the software providers,” the research’s corresponding author, Marios Theristis, told pv magazine. “We did not rank tools, instead, we focused on how do different modeling features and assumptions affect predictions.”
“We compiled summary tables of software features and then compared the predictions made by the providers,” he went on to say. “We observed that results align closely for simple systems, by which we mean fixed-tilt, flat-terrain, small-scale, monofacial systems, while differences increase as systems become more complex and are linked to specific modeling choices and software features.”
In the study “Feature review of photovoltaic modeling software utilizing blind performance assessment,” published in Solar Energy, the Sandia group explained that, unlike earlier studies that focused on small systems, single locations, or anonymous participants, their work presents a transparent, feature-level comparison of widely used PV modeling software supporting both pre-construction post-construction activities. 
The scientists categorized software features into weather and irradiance, DC system modeling, AC system modeling, and derates. The software tools were tested using one year of data from from two fixed-tilt, monofacial, south-facing systems in Albuquerque, United States and an undisclosed site in Germany, with a capacity of 15.4 kW and 14.5 MW, respectively.
Measurements were performed independently, with instrument details withheld from the software providers, enabling an unbiased blind comparison of PV modeling performance across software platforms, according to the research team. Weather and irradiance data were also filtered before distribution to software providers.
The analyis showed that PV modeling results vary significantly across software due to differences in weather handling, system modeling, inverter assumptions, and user-specified derates, while highlighting the critical influence of both software design and user choices on predicted energy outcomes. Moreover, the blind modeling comparison revealed differences across software in plane of array (POA) irradiance transposition, module temperature, DC/AC power, and derates.
Weather modeling, for exampled, varied due to different libraries, transposition models, and assumptions about air mass, albedo, and location, with median POA residuals ranging from 14.65 to 6.06. DC system features were generally consistent, but shading and temperature models varied. By contrast, AC system modeling differed in inverter efficiency, clipping handling, and curtailment adjustments. Furthermore, shading approaches were found to vary by stringing, irradiance decomposition, and terrain assumptions, creating uncertainty.
“Our findings underscore the need for continuous, independent, and rigorous validation of modeling methods, comparing software tools against complex, real-world systems,” Theristis said. “Ultimately, the ‘right’ tool depends on project complexity, workflow, and the surrounding software ecosystem.”

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Town of East Windsor to appeal state's approval of solar panel project expansion – fox61.com

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EAST WINDSOR, Conn. — East Windsor community members continue to push back against a solar panel expansion project after the Connecticut Siting Council approved the expansion on March 5. 
Gravel Pit Solar now has the green light from the state to expand on 150 more acres and add 30 megawatts of power.
People in town said their protests of the expansion fell on deaf ears after the state decided to move forward with the project.
“When you don’t have that choice anymore, you’re losing that small-town America that a lot of people appreciate,” said resident Brandon Knoll. “I like living in the suburbs, but now you’re forcing industry and the new surge of technology in my community. I don’t really get a say in that.”
Knoll, who grew up in the area, said the town’s rejection of the expansion isn’t just about losing their farmland and environmental resource—it’s also about how they were left out of the decision-making process from day one.
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East Windsor’s population is just over 11,000, and about 2,000 people signed an online petition against the expansion. 
“I think that should be a little bit more of an option, as opposed to saying, ‘We’re gonna do it right here.’ It should be almost put up to a vote of who is going to benefit from it most, who has the most land and resources to allocate for this?” Knoll said. 
East Windsor First Selectman Jason Bowsza hears why people are upset—it’s the same reasons he and the board are disappointed with the decision to allow expansion. 
He said they are doing everything they can to halt the project’s growth, and that they have already started the appeal process to reverse the decision. 
“The Siting Council is not considering the impact that they’re having on only a few municipalities that they continue to approve these projects in,” he said. 
Despite the valid concerns town members brought up, Bowsza said the state continues pushing more projects on them without asking.
“We have 25% of the cited renewable energy in the state of Connecticut, all without having any local involvement in the siting or decision-making around any of it,” Bowsza said. 
FOX61 reached out to Gravel Pit Solar about why they want to expand despite pushback from the town but did not immediately hear back.
Their website says the expansion will “deliver affordable, renewable energy to customers in Connecticut – producing enough clean energy to power approximately 4,500 homes.”
Solen Aref is a Multi-Skilled Journalist for FOX61.com. She can be reached by email at SAref@FOX61.com

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Green Garden looks at ways to stem solar farms – Southwest Regional Publishing

The Vedette
Southwest Regional Publishing
Green Garden Township officials are researching incorporation as a “rural district” in an effort to stem the proliferation of solar fields nearby.
The issue was on the agenda at the March 9 meeting of the township board.
In Illinois, an “incorporated rural district” is described as a small, legally defined municipality, such as a village, located outside of major metropolitan areas, or an area zoned for low-density residential and agricultural use. Public improvements like municipal water and sewer often are not a part of it.
Township Supervisor Dean Christofilos confirmed that incorporation is being explored.
“We will discuss the topic on whether to pursue the steps required for incorporation, including researching  the benefits, drawbacks and challenges,” he said.       
“If the board approves moving forward to pursue the initial steps of incorporation, the final decision will rest with the electorate — the registered voters of Green Garden Township — through a ballot vote.”
Christofilos said the incorporation process would include a resident petition, court approval, and a referendum.
“The primary reason for considering incorporation is the significant number of proposed utility-scale solar projects that would convert large portions of Green Garden Township farmland – approximately 2,500 acres – into industrial solar facilities. Incorporation could allow us to retain local control over land use decisions.
“These solar projects would be scattered throughout the township and would significantly alter the character of our rural-residential community, limiting future rural growth and changing the composition of our township.
“Over the past three years, residents have expressed dissatisfaction with state laws that many feel favor the solar industry and limit local control in unincorporated areas,” he added. “Many residents believe that solar developers currently have more influence over land use decisions than the community itself.
“Incorporation could provide Green Garden Township with greater local control over land use planning and future development decisions. Many residents believe that forming an incorporated rural district could help protect our 35 rural-residential sections from what many call ‘solar sprawl’ and preserve the rural quality of life that defines our community.
“We believe industrial-scale solar development should be strategically located within designated industrial zones — not placed indiscriminately across productive Green Garden agricultural land.
“Our comprehensive land use plan includes an industrial section where solar development is more appropriate.”
Incorporation as a village typically requires a substantial commercial and industrial base to support necessary services, like police protection or water and sewer improvements. But Christofilos emphasized that “residents have consistently expressed that they do not want Green Garden to become an urbanized south suburb or compete with surrounding municipalities. 
A smaller district would require a more modest operating budget.
“The goal is to remain a rural district that preserves our agricultural roots and rural-residential lifestyle while building a sustainable financial foundation.”
Christofilos noted that Green Garden Township “currently has some commercial and industrial presence.”
“As a rural incorporated district, we would have the opportunity to strategically grow and strengthen our tax base in ways that align with our rural character.
“Potential opportunities include developing agritourism and supporting locally desired businesses such as a farmer’s market, a meat-processing butcher shop, a country café, and a bakery featuring homemade goods.”
Christofilos said some landowners and officials from neighboring unincorporated townships have already expressed interest in potentially annexing into an incorporated Green Garden in the future.
He declined to name others who may be interested.
“It is too early in the process,” he said, “and they may or may not want me to say until they have time to also do more research and communicate to those who need to know. I want to respect their confidence. 
“With approximately 3,900 residents, Green Garden Township is well-positioned to explore rural incorporation. Building strong relationships with neighboring townships will be essential as this process develops.”
Christofilos noted that, as a legal and electoral process, incorporation could take approximately 1–2 years, depending on court proceedings, petitions, and potential developments related to pending solar projects.
“Because we are still in the exploratory phase, we do not yet have a firm timeline. The process will require careful planning, legal review, and community engagement.”
This is not the first time township officials have considered incorporation. 
“Incorporation has been discussed periodically over the years. However, the recent increase in utility-scale solar proposals has renewed the conversation,” he said.
“Many residents feel the township faces a critical choice: incorporate and retain local control over land use decisions, or remain unincorporated and allow large-scale industrial development to shape the township’s future.
“It is too early to know if residents will favor incorporation. I do know that most residents are not in favor of the overwhelming influx of solar farm projects. As discussions continue, we will seek clear and broad resident input on how incorporation can positively affect our community and help to stand against planned solar sprawl on many acres of our farmland.
“Elected officials must act in the best interest of the community, which requires thorough research, transparent communication, town hall meetings, and, ultimately, a vote of the electorate.
“Since 2021, residents have repeatedly voiced concerns about industrial uses near their homes and properties. Changing our legal status from an unincorporated township to an incorporated rural district could offer stronger protections for home and property investments and retain local control over land use decisions.
“This would be a significant step and will not be taken lightly. We are committed to moving thoughtfully and responsibly.
Christofilos thanked Tom Becker and the Watershed Committee “for their research and efforts in keeping residents informed about ongoing solar project developments.”
Updated information is available on the Watershed Committee page on the Green Garden Township website or Green Garden Township Board Facebook page.

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Jeddah university professor recognized for solar cell innovation – Arab News

Jeddah university professor recognized for solar cell innovation  Arab News
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India added 119 GW of solar module manufacturing capacity and over 9 G – Shanghai Metals Market

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Experts link solar fire to poor installation, substandard products – punchng.com

Experts link solar fire to poor installation, substandard products  punchng.com
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Tunk Area solar project land plans get conditional approval from Wyoming County planners – Wyoming County Examiner

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The Wyoming County Planning Commission on Wednesday granted conditional approval to land development plans for two solar panel projects proposed by Tunkhannock Area School District.
That means land development plans for all three of the district’s planned solar projects have gained conditional approval. However, the status and potential future of the district’s solar initiative — which was announced in 2024 as a potential way to save millions of dollars on electricity costs — remains unclear.
The district plans to place solar panels at three sites: The district high school in Tunkhannock Twp.; the elementary center at the border of Tunkhannock Twp. and Tunkhannock borough; and the district’s campus in Mehoopany Twp.
The planning commission gave conditional approval to the land plan for the elementary school project in July 2025.
The commission rejected the original land plans for the high school and Mehoopany Twp. sites, because of the discovery of sewer line no-build easements at the high school site and concerns over emergency vehicle access at the Mehoopany Twp. site.
Project engineers submitted revised land development plans for both projects earlier this year. At February’s planning commission meeting, county Planning Director Matthew Jones said the revised plan for the Mehoopany Twp. campus appeared to be “much improved.”
On Wednesday, the commission unanimously approved plans for both the high school and Mehoopany Twp. sites, but attached several conditions to each approval.
Conditions for both projects include approval of an erosion prevention plan by the county conservation district. Also, a note must be added to each plan, acknowledging that evergreen buffer trees will be at least 6 feet tall at the time of planting.
Also, plans for the Mehoopany Twp. site must be mailed to the FWM Volunteer Fire Co. and the county emergency management agency, so they can familiarize themselves with the location of the new fire access lane.
However, it is not clear whether the school district will proceed with its solar initiative. The uncertainty began last June, when the district school board voted to pause any action on the solar projects after the planning commission rejected the original land plan for the high school site.
The school board voted to restart work on the solar projects in September.
At the January school board meeting, district Superintendent Paul Dougherty said he could not recommend the direct purchase option for the project, which had been estimated at about $10 million. He said he was concerned the district might not receive $4.5 million in federal solar tax credits, even if it qualified for the credits.
At the Feb. 18 school board meeting, Dougherty said district officials will likely decide plans for the solar initiative in the next month or two.
At Thursday’s school board meeting, Dougherty said “there is potential” for the solar project to be brought before the board at its April 16 meeting, after receiving information from Penelec.
 
 
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Sunsure Energy Signs Solar PPA with JAKSON Engineering to Boost Green Power Adoption – Energetica India Magazine

Sunsure Energy will supply 7.28 million units of solar power annually to JAKSON, significantly reducing carbon emissions and advancing industrial decarbonisation in Uttar Pradesh.
March 20, 2026. By News Bureau
Sunsure Energy, a renewable energy solutions provider for businesses and utilities, has signed a long-term Power Purchase Agreement (PPA) with JAKSON Engineering, part of the energy and infrastructure conglomerate JAKSON Group. Under the agreement, Sunsure will supply 7.28 million units of solar power annually to JAKSON’s corporate office in Noida and manufacturing facility in Greater Noida, significantly increasing the share of renewable energy in its operations.
Speaking on the development, Gagan Chanana, Joint Managing Director and CEO, JAKSON Solar Modules and Cells Business, said, “At JAKSON, sustainability is not just a target, it is fundamental to our business. Our collaboration with Sunsure Energy marks a significant step in integrating clean energy across our operations. This agreement also aligns with the Government of India’s broader push to accelerate the transition towards energy independence through renewable sources.”
Commenting on the partnership, Shashank Sharma, Founder, Chairman and CEO, Sunsure Energy, said, “India’s energy transition is being shaped by how decisively industries integrate clean power into their day-to-day operations. JAKSON Group is itself deeply involved in India’s renewable energy ecosystem. A partnership of this nature therefore reflects the growing conviction within the industry that the transition to clean energy is both inevitable and essential. It is this collective momentum that will enable India to move closer to true energy independence while setting a strong global example in industrial decarbonisation.”
The 4.7 MWp solar PPA will offset approximately 80 percent of conventional energy consumption at JAKSON’s corporate office and up to 40 percent at its manufacturing facility. The transition is expected to offset nearly 5.2 million kgs of carbon dioxide emissions annually, equivalent to the environmental benefit of planting more than 2.3 lakh trees. This marks a significant step in reducing the company’s carbon footprint and strengthening its sustainability commitments.
The agreement also advances Sunsure Energy’s ‘UP Shakti’ mission, its commitment to powering and decarbonising Uttar Pradesh’s industrial and manufacturing sector. Sunsure Energy currently supplies round-the-clock renewable energy to commercial and industrial customers across India, supporting decarbonisation across sectors such as FMCG, data centres, ceramics, cement, iron and steel, pharmaceuticals, heavy engineering and metals. Its clients include Bharat Forge, UltraTech, Wonder Cement, Sify Technologies, Bisleri, Sandoz, Jindal Stainless, Emcure, Kajaria Ceramics, Haldiram’s, Dabur, INOX Air Products, Gallant Ispat and APL Apollo, among others.

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Goldbeck secures EPC contract for 722MW PV plant in Poland, Europe’s largest – PV Tech

German solar developer Goldbeck Solar has secured an engineering, procurement, and construction (EPC) contract to deliver three PV plants in Poland’s West Pomeranian province, with a combined installed capacity of 722MWp. 
The portfolio comprises Sidłowo PV Plant at 290MWp, Kikowo PV Plant at 235MWp, and Dobrowo PV Plant at 197MWp. According to the firm, once operational, it will become the largest PV installation in Europe.  

The projects will be directly connected to the 400kV high-voltage transmission network of Polskie Sieci Elektroenergetyczne (PSE). Along with overseeing all phases of the project, Goldbeck will supervise the associated HV/MV substations, the high-voltage cable routes, and the grid connection infrastructure, including the STR LKO 400/110 kV substation. 
“Securing the full EPC scope for such a complex, large-scale project highlights our capabilities and positions us at the forefront of Europe’s renewable energy sector. We are thrilled to bring our expertise to Sidłowo-Kikowo-Dobrowo project, delivering a project that sets new benchmarks in scale and impact,” Steffen Emmerich, managing director of Goldbeck Solar Polska, said. 
Earlier this month, Belgian renewables developer Virya Energy secured US$99 million (€85 million) in equity from European Bank for Reconstruction and Development (EBRD) to acquire the Sidłowo-Kikowo-Dobrowo project. 
The projects, previously owned by Optima Wind, form Poland’s largest solar PV cluster and one of Europe’s largest, with a combined annual output of 666GWh. 

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Welspun Renewable And NLC India Renewables Win GUVNL 625 MW Solar Auction At ₹2.34/kWh – SolarQuarter

Welspun Renewable And NLC India Renewables Win GUVNL 625 MW Solar Auction At ₹2.34/kWh  SolarQuarter
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REconnect Indore: Experts Call for Accelerated Solar, Storage, and Decentralised Energy Push – Energetica India Magazine

Amid rapid growth in India’s renewable energy capacity, Energetica India convened the REconnect Summit 2026 in Indore to deliberate on scaling solar, storage, and decentralised energy solutions, with a strong focus on Madhya Pradesh’s evolving role in the clean energy transition.
March 20, 2026. By Mrinmoy Dey

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India Has Potential to Add 10 GW of Agri-Voltaic Capacity in Five Years: Manish Khare

Industry is Shifting from Standalone Solar to Integrated Energy Solutions: MD, Truzon Solar

India Must Develop A Robust Testing and Certification Ecosystem for BESS: Ekta Kabra, Geon

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TNO rolls perovskite solar cells toward production – Bits&Chips

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TNO has established spinoff Perovion Technologies for the industrialization of lightweight, flexible solar cells. The new venture intends to bridge the gap between lab research and industrial roll-to-roll production. Because the process is continuous rather than batch-based, roll-to-roll is faster and easier to scale than current manufacturing techniques, potentially delivering cheaper solar cells.
While traditional solar cells are made of glass and silicon, Perovion uses perovskite, which is made from relatively common raw materials whose crystal structure can absorb and convert sunlight very efficiently. Thus, less material is required than conventionally with silicon, opening the door to flexible solar cells. “By producing perovskite solar cells on thin foils, we can apply solar energy to surfaces where traditional solar panels aren’t suitable,” says Sjoerd Veenstra, CTO of Perovion.
For the development of these solar cells, TNO worked with SolarNL and Solliance. Perovion is currently looking for industrial partners and investors to help with accelerated market access and industrial scaling.
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Global solar PV installations reached 647GW in 2025 – PV Tech

Global solar PV installations reached 647GW in 2025, up 11% from the previous year, according to data from think tank Ember.
Combined with wind power, the two technologies added a record 814GW of new capacity in 2025, with solar PV accounting for nearly 4GW of new additions for each 1GW of wind installed.

More than half of the installed solar PV in 2025 came from China, totalling 378 GW. Most of China’s solar PV installations in 2025 came in the first half of the year, with the first five months accounting for 237GW, including a record 111GW in May alone, driven by a pricing reform for grid-connected renewables that led to projects reaching commercial operations before June.
Despite yet another record year for solar PV additions in China, the coming years are poised to see a decrease in capacity additions, according to the China Photovoltaic Industry Association (CPIA). The trade body forecasts that China will add 180-240GW of new solar PV capacity in 2026, down from 315GW in 2025, which aligns with Ember’s data for alternating current (AC).
Another notable market with a record year in 2025 is India, which added 49GW of new solar PV, up from 31.9GW in 2024, as shown in the chart above. Converted to GWac, new installations in 2025 stood at 37.7GW, which is roughly aligned with data from Indian research companies Mercom (36.6GW) and JMK Research (37.9GW).
Unlike China, India is forecast to further accelerate the installation of new solar PV capacity in 2026, with an estimated 42.5GW, according to JMK Research, up from the 37.9GW registered in 2025.
“The scale and speed of solar’s expansion is unlike anything seen before in the power sector. Along with accelerating capacity additions for wind, these technologies are on track to become the backbone of the global electricity supply,” said Leonard Heberer, data analyst at Ember.
Cumulative solar PV at the end of 2025 stood at 2.9TW and is likely to have crossed the 3TW milestone in the first few months of 2026. The previous milestone was reached in November 2024 and took only two years to go from 1TW of cumulative installed solar PV to 2TW.
China accounts for nearly half of the 2.9TW solar PV installed at the end of 2025, with 1.4TW.
Moreover, Ember added that since the beginning of the conflict in the Middle East, the output of all the solar PV and wind capacity currently installed globally has avoided the equivalent of nearly 330TWh of gas generation. This represents a potential saving of more than US$40 billion.
“The continuing escalation in the Middle East is a stark reminder of the risks of dependence on imported oil and gas. Solar, wind, and batteries give importers a genuine path to energy security, one that is cheaper, faster to deploy and doesn’t come with geopolitical strings attached,” added Kingsmill Bond, energy strategist at Ember.

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Tesla in talks with Chinese firms to buy $2.9 bln worth of solar equipment – The Hindu

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Updated – March 20, 2026 08:31 am IST
FILE PHOTO: Elon Musk waves to the crowd during the 56th annual World Economic Forum (WEF) meeting in Davos, Switzerland, January 22, 2026. REUTERS/Denis Balibouse/File Photo | Photo Credit: DENIS BALIBOUSE
Tesla is looking to buy equipment worth $2.9 billion for manufacturing ​solar panels and cells from Chinese suppliers, including Suzhou Maxwell Technologies, two people familiar with the matter said, as CEO Elon Musk aims to add 100 ‌gigawatts of solar capacity in the United States.
Mr. Musk said in January that solar power could meet all of ​the electricity needs of the United States, including the ever-increasing demand from a growing number of data centres. Job postings ⁠on the Tesla website said it aims to deploy 100 GW of “solar manufacturing from raw materials on American soil before the end of 2028”.
Suzhou Maxwell Technologies, the world’s biggest producer of screen-printing equipment used to make solar cells, is among the leading candidates to supply machinery for the project and ‌has been seeking export approval from China’s commerce ministry, according to the two people and a third person. The sources declined to be named because the information is not public.
Other potential suppliers include Shenzhen S.C New Energy Technology and Laplace ‌Renewable Energy Technology , the first two people said.
Some of the estimated 20 billion yuan ($2.9 billion) worth of equipment, including screen-printing ‌production ⁠lines, will require export approval from Chinese regulators, according to the people. It wasn’t immediately clear how much of the equipment ⁠would require approval or how long it would take.
The Chinese companies were told to deliver the equipment before this autumn, the three people said, with two saying it would be shipped to Texas. Mr. Musk plans to build the solar capacity mainly for use by Tesla, although some will be used to power SpaceX satellites, the ​people said.
The potential order highlights one issue for the ‌United States as it looks to reduce its dependence on China, reviving U.S. manufacturing still requires some degree of trade with the world’s second-largest economy.
Chinese media reported last month that Tesla has visited several solar companies in China. The details of the companies in advanced talks, the estimated size of potential purchases, the delivery timeline, and regulatory requirements are reported here for the first time.
Tesla, China’s ‌commerce ministry, Suzhou Maxwell, Shenzhen S.C New Energy and Laplace Renewable Energy did not respond to Reuters requests for comment.
An order from Tesla would mark a big boost for Chinese producers of solar manufacturing equipment, which have struggled with weak demand because of a domestic production glut.
The U.S. solar market, meanwhile, is ⁠heavily protected by tariffs aimed at curbing imports of cheaper panels and cells from China and Southeast Asia, where many Chinese producers operate subsidiaries.
However, solar manufacturing equipment was excluded from tariffs by the Biden administration in 2024 at the urging of U.S. solar panel makers who argued they ‌had nowhere else to buy the machines needed to set up domestic factories. That exemption has been extended by the Trump administration, and the United States has been pushing to create its own solar supply chain to reduce its dependence on Chinese companies.
Mr. Musk has criticised tariff barriers as making the economics of deploying solar in the United States “artificially high”, when the country is facing a critical power shortage driven by a surge in demand from AI data centres and manufacturing.
His solar ambitions cut a stark contrast with the energy policies of President Donald Trump, who seeks to maximise U.S. fossil fuel production and has slashed federal subsidies for solar and wind projects, which ‌he calls costly and unreliable.
Mr. Musk briefly worked for the Trump administration running the Department of Government Efficiency, which oversaw mass layoffs of federal workers to save money.
U.S. ​power consumption hit its second straight record high in 2025 and will rise further in 2026 and 2027, according to the Energy Information Administration (EIA).
Setting up 100 GW of solar manufacturing in a couple of years would be a ⁠staggering feat, and Mr. Musk is known for making big promises on ambitious timelines that often do not pan out.
Overall, the U.S. had 1,300 ⁠GW of capacity to generate electricity as of 2024, according to a report published last year by the American Public Power Association. Out of that, only 10%, or 135 GW, was solar-powered.
Tesla has been on a push to source more ‌components locally in different regions. However, it remains dependent on 400 China-based suppliers to keep its costs down. Sixty of them also supply Tesla globally, including for its U.S. EV plants.
Production preparations for Tesla’s Cybertruck and Semi models in the U.S. encountered setbacks last ​year after component shipments from China were suspended, following a significant tariff hike on Chinese goods imposed by the Trump administration, Reuters previously reported.
Published – March 20, 2026 08:26 am IST
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New 2D Materials Enable High-Efficiency Solar on Any Surface – SolarQuarter

New 2D Materials Enable High-Efficiency Solar on Any Surface  SolarQuarter
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First Gen starts 54 MW Batangas solar project – Solarbytes

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Philippines based First Gen Group has begun construction of the 54 MW Inara Solar Power Plant in Tanauan City, Batangas. The project, located in Barangay Bilog-bilog, spans 36 hectares and involves an investment of about PHP 2 billion. It is scheduled for completion by summer next year and marks the company’s entry into utility-scale solar. The facility has been designed for future expansion up to 100 MW capacity. The company is also evaluating battery energy storage integration to improve grid flexibility. The project includes agrivoltaic deployment, enabling crop cultivation beneath solar panels. Power generated will support Batangas Electric Cooperative II and nearby industrial users in southern Luzon.

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Qair commissions 14.6 MW Beehive solar in Poland – Solarbytes

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France based Qair Group, an independent renewable energy company, has commissioned 13 photovoltaic farms in Poland under the Beehive project. The combined installed capacity of the portfolio stands at 14.6 MW. The project integrates multiple small-scale solar installations into a unified generation system. This approach supports localized electricity generation aligned with community energy demand. Qair operates through its local entity Qair Polska, contributing to regional renewable deployment. The company currently manages over 550 MW of wind and solar assets in Poland. Its Poland team includes more than 120 professionals working across renewable energy projects.

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FEMP Attends Ribbon-Cutting Event for Solar Photovoltaic ESPC ENABLE Project at National Institute of Standards and Technology – Department of Energy (.gov)

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The project represents an economical clean energy solution that reduces government energy costs.
Federal Energy Management Program
To mark Earth Day, Federal Energy Management Program (FEMP) Director Rob Ivester and ESPC ENABLE Program Manager Ira Birnbaum joined officials from the U.S. Department of Commerce, National Institute of Standards and Technology (NIST), the energy service company (ESCO) and financier team of Legatus6 and Constellation New Energy, and Congressman Dave Trone at a ribbon-cutting ceremony for the NIST solar photovoltaic (PV) project.
The project, implemented using FEMP’s Energy Savings Performance Contract (ESPC) ENABLE program, is a 5 MW DC, 4 MW AC ground-mounted PV system. The project was put in place using an ESPC energy sales agreement (ESA)—the second under the ESPC ENABLE program. It is the largest PV system installed at a civilian government agency that uses all of the produced electricity on-site, according to the National Renewable Energy Laboratory (NREL).
NIST installed a 5 MW DC, 4 MW AC ground-mounted PV system using an ESPC ESA.
The project represents an economical clean-energy solution that reduces government energy costs. It generates significant infrastructure development and gives a boost to manufacturing as well as excellent construction and other trades-related jobs—and all this at a cost savings to the U.S. government.
The project was awarded to Legatus6, a service disabled veteran-owned small business solar developer and ESCO, with financing provided by Constellation New Energy. It was the sixteenth project awarded under ESPC ENABLE (the current number of ESPC ENABLE projects awarded now stands at 20).
The $10.2 million contract makes it the largest ESPC ENABLE project to date. Over the 20-year contract period, during which the ESCO will own, operate, maintain, repair and replace the system, NIST will gain the following benefits:
After NIST purchases the system at the end of the contract, as required under an ESPC ESA, savings are anticipated for an additional 10 years of solar generation where NIST is expected to save an additional $8.3 million, bringing the total net electric bill savings to almost $12 million.
For additional project information, read FEMP’s case study and NIST’s press release.
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Low new module prices stall growth in secondary solar market – pv magazine International

Data from EnergyBin and Buckstop shows used solar modules made up just 1% of resale listings in 2025, as falling prices for new panels weaken reuse economics.
Image: EnergyBin, LLC, Buckstop, Inc.
From pv magazine USA
Given that modules from the early 2010s solar boom are nearing the end of their expected lifespans, it’s no surprise that a repowering wave has seemed imminent for some time. We’ve all heard the saying: new is always better, and it seems solar buyers agree. The tsunami of mass panel retirements hasn’t crashed yet.  
According to new data from secondary solar market platform EnergyBin and urban mining startup Buckstop’s 2025 PV Module Price Index – Secondary Solar Market, used and legacy modules represented just 2% of resale supply listed on EnergyBin’s wholesale market last year, down from 5% in 2024 and 9% in 2022. 
While the report notes that 2022 first looked like the harbinger of a multi-year repowering trend reliant on panel decommissioning and remarketing, the used module supply on EnergyBin in the years following “failed to reflect such a trend.” 98% of modules listed on the platform last year were brand-new, never having been installed and largely originating from project cancellations or delays that leave developers with excess inventory.  
In total, 1.62 million modules were listed for resale on EnergyBin in 2025, a 16.8% increase from 2020. The downstream solar hardware market is slowly but surely expanding, though the growing glut of new modules may make it harder for resale economics to pencil out.  
“The global oversupply of modules has definitely resulted in a more challenging market for reuse,” explained Nick Kumleben, the co-founder and chief business development officer at Buckstop, who co-authored the report. However, he told pv magazine USA, the market seems to be improving so far in 2026, as new panel prices are likely to increase due to input cost inflation and new tariff measures. 
Overall, secondary market prices tend to be 20 to 70% less than primary market prices. This is particularly true for used equipment. According to the index, the average price for used modules dropped by 30% from January 2024 levels, falling to $0.058/W by the fourth quarter of 2025.  
That’s a razor-thin resale margin that can make remarketing and repairs difficult, uneconomical or not worth the time and money. That could be one reason why much of today’s used module supply appears to be bypassing wholesale marketplaces altogether to be exported or recycled directly.  
“The market could certainly be more transparent,” Kumleben said, especially “given the multiple trade classifications available to exporters of used panels and the sensitive nature of disposal decisions.” 
The report notes that the price of used modules will likely stay below 10 cents per watt “until the world market corrects for oversupply of new modules.” But not all used models will feel the squeeze equally.  
Panels less than ten years old with degradation rates below roughly 0.5% to 1% per year still retain some resale potential, particularly if they remain defect-free. Buyers are increasingly prioritizing long-term reliability, and Kumleben noted that panels with lower degradation rates have more resale opportunities later in their lifecycle.  
“The race to the bottom has resulted in ample errors occurring within a few years of deployment,” the authors write, pointing toward the move from a fully tempered 3.2 mm glass to a 2.0 mm double-glass design that’s made modules more fragile.  
Technology shifts also play a role, with P-type modules making up 72% of all resale inventory across black, bifacial and monofacial categories. As the market transitions more fully to N-type architectures, sellers are expected to speed up the phase-out of older technology. Per the May 2026 International Technology Roadmap for Photovoltaics (ITRPV) 16th Edition, the market share of PERC cells is expected to drop to 10% by 2027 and disappear entirely by 2035.  
“Technology transitions do result in challenges for resale economics, but it’s important to remember that in most resale markets, the competition is not always from new modules,” Kumleben noted. He pointed out that often, “the alternative to a used panel is a diesel generator or no power supply at all.” 
Legacy modules, too, are struggling in the resale market and accounted for a mere 1% of supply last year. While they may be new and unused, legacy panels often can’t keep pace with newer, higher-efficiency modules; resale gets impractical.  
Secondary market dynamics could still shift, as declining new module prices may even out as Chinese manufacturers face sustained losses. But sharply rising silver prices, which have shot up more than 200% over the past year, are making manufacturing more expensive. Pre-owned solar could create an opportunity, the report notes.  
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EPFL, CSEM achieve world record efficiency of 30.02% in perovskite-silicon triple-junction solar cell – pv magazine International

An international research team boosted triple-junction solar cell performance by enhancing perovskite crystal growth, increasing middle-cell light absorption, and adding reflective nanoparticles.
The proposed triple-junction solar cell
Image: EPFL
Researchers from the Swiss Center for Electronics and Microtechnology (CSEM) and the École polytechnique fédérale de Lausanne (EPFL) claim to have achieved a power conversion efficiency exceeding 30% for a triple-junction solar cells combining two thin-film perovskite cells and one silicon cell on a single device. 
The result was certified by China’s Shanghai Institute of Microsystem and Information Technology (SIMIT).
The scientists said the new result represents a world record for this cell technology, surpassing the previous record of 27.10% set by a research team led by National University of Singapore (NUS).
The researchers report having addressed two major challenges in triple-junction solar cells: low voltage in the top perovskite layer and limited current in the middle layer. They tackled these issues through three key modifications to the device’s materials and optical design.
First, they introduced a molecule that guides perovskite crystal growth and passivates defects, enabling the top cell to reach voltages of 1.4 V under sunlight. Next, they developed a novel three-step fabrication process for the middle cell, improving absorption of near-infrared light. Finally, they incorporated silicon oxide (SiOx) nanoparticles between the silicon bottom cell and the middle perovskite layer to reflect additional sunlight back into the middle cell, further boosting its current.
Image: EPFL
“We show that with clever design and processing, we can approach performance levels traditionally reserved for the most expensive III–V multi-junction solar cells used in space, which are composed of multiple semiconductor layers,” said the research’s lead author, Kerem Artuk. “These can reach up to 37% efficiency, and cost around 1,000 times more than terrestrial cells per watt. Our approach opens the door to a new generation of industrially viable, high-efficiency multi-junction photovoltaics.”
“Our first demonstration in 2018 had only 13% efficiency, so reaching over 30% efficiency today in a triple-junction device is a remarkable achievement,” adds PV-Lab head Christophe Ballif. “Triple-junction solar cells have an even higher efficiency potential compared to single junction and tandem – well above 40%.”
The new cell device was introduced in the study “Triple-junction solar cells with improved carrier and photon management,” published nature.
The research team included academics from Germany’s Fraunhofer Institute for Solar Energy Systems ISE and Australia’s University of Queensland, among others.
*The article was updated on March 19 to reflect that the efficiency result was validated by the Shanghai Institute of Microsystem and Information Technology (SIMIT).
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HOLACA Universal Ground Stake Mount For Outdoor Cameras & Solar Panels – Compatible With Ring, Blink, Eufy, Arlo, Wyze – ruhrkanal.news

HOLACA Universal Ground Stake Mount For Outdoor Cameras & Solar Panels – Compatible With Ring, Blink, Eufy, Arlo, Wyze  ruhrkanal.news
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Tesla (TSLA) Negotiates $2.9B Solar Equipment Deal With Chinese Suppliers – Meyka

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The clean energy push is gaining speed as Tesla enters advanced talks for a massive 2.9 billion dollar solar equipment deal with Chinese suppliers. This development signals a major step in Tesla’s long-term renewable energy strategy, especially as the company aims to scale solar capacity and strengthen its position beyond electric vehicles.
The deal is reportedly tied to a large-scale expansion plan that could reach up to 100 gigawatts of solar capacity, placing Tesla among the key global players in solar infrastructure. The move comes at a time when energy demand is rising, and countries are shifting toward sustainable solutions.
So why is Tesla focusing heavily on solar now?
The answer is simple: diversification and long-term growth. Tesla is not just an electric vehicle company anymore. It is building an integrated clean energy ecosystem.
The latest negotiations highlight Tesla’s aggressive expansion into the solar energy sector. The company is working with Chinese suppliers to secure equipment needed for large-scale solar deployment.
According to insights discussed in CoinCentral coverage titled Tesla TSLA Stock Drops China Solar Equipment 2.9B US 100GW Expansion, the deal is linked to Tesla’s plan to significantly increase its solar capacity.
Solar energy plays a key role in Tesla’s broader vision of sustainable energy.
By investing in solar infrastructure, Tesla aims to create a closed-loop system where energy is generated, stored, and used efficiently.
Why does this matter for investors?
Because solar energy offers recurring revenue opportunities and long-term growth potential, especially as global demand continues to rise.
• Estimated deal value of 2.9 billion dollars with Chinese suppliers
• Potential expansion target of up to 100 gigawatts of solar capacity
• Focus on large-scale solar infrastructure and equipment sourcing
• Strengthening Tesla’s renewable energy portfolio beyond vehicles
• Alignment with global clean energy transition trends
These developments underline Tesla’s commitment to becoming a leader in sustainable energy.
The news of the deal has created mixed reactions in the market.
While the long-term outlook appears strong, short-term concerns around costs and execution have impacted sentiment.
Large investments require significant capital, which can pressure margins in the near term.
However, if executed successfully, the solar expansion could generate strong returns over time.
Investors are closely watching how Tesla balances growth and profitability.
China plays a crucial role in the global solar supply chain.
The country is one of the largest producers of solar panels and related equipment.
By partnering with Chinese suppliers, Tesla can access cost-efficient manufacturing and advanced technology.
This helps reduce production costs and improve scalability.
However, it also introduces geopolitical and supply chain risks, which investors need to consider.
Market reactions are also visible on social platforms, where traders and analysts are discussing the implications of the deal.
https://twitter.com/Sino_Market/status/2034813928036053061
Another update highlights the scale of Tesla’s solar ambitions.
https://twitter.com/Sino_Market/status/2034816325986726263
A broader market perspective was also shared by financial media.
https://twitter.com/CNBCi/status/2034823224853160342
These discussions show how quickly information spreads and influences market sentiment.
Tesla’s strategy goes beyond selling electric vehicles.
The company is building a complete energy ecosystem that includes solar panels, battery storage, and energy management systems.
This integrated approach allows Tesla to capture value across multiple stages of the energy chain.
For example, solar panels generate energy, batteries store it, and software systems manage usage.
This creates a seamless experience for customers and opens new revenue streams.
• Solar panels for renewable energy generation
• Energy storage solutions such as battery systems
• Software for energy management and optimization
• Integration with electric vehicles for efficient energy use
• Expansion into large-scale energy infrastructure projects
This ecosystem approach is a key differentiator for Tesla.
The global solar market is expanding rapidly.
Industry forecasts suggest that solar capacity could grow at a compound annual rate of 8 to 10 percent over the next decade.
Governments around the world are investing in renewable energy to reduce carbon emissions.
This creates a strong demand environment for companies like Tesla.
If Tesla captures even a small share of this growing market, it could generate significant revenue.
The 2.9 billion dollar deal represents a major investment.
In the short term, it may increase expenses related to equipment, installation, and infrastructure.
However, in the long term, it could improve revenue stability through energy sales and services.
Analysts expect that Tesla’s energy division could become a larger contributor to overall revenue in the coming years.
This shift could reduce reliance on vehicle sales.
Investor sentiment toward Tesla remains strong but cautious.
The company is known for ambitious projects and rapid innovation.
While these factors create growth opportunities, they also introduce risks.
Some investors are using AI Stock research to analyze Tesla’s position in the renewable energy and technology sectors.
This helps them understand how the company fits into broader market trends.
Innovation is at the core of Tesla’s strategy.
The company continues to invest in advanced technologies to improve efficiency and performance.
This includes improvements in solar panel design, battery storage, and energy management systems.
Technology plays a key role in making renewable energy more accessible and cost-effective.
Despite the positive outlook, there are risks involved.
Supply chain disruptions could impact project timelines.
Geopolitical tensions may affect partnerships with Chinese suppliers.
High capital investment could pressure short-term profitability.
Competition in the solar market is increasing rapidly.
Understanding these risks is essential for investors.
Looking ahead, Tesla’s solar expansion could reshape its business model.
If the company successfully scales its solar operations, it could become a major player in the global energy market.
Some forecasts suggest that Tesla’s energy division could see double-digit growth in the coming years.
Investors are also watching how the company integrates solar with its existing products.
Many analysts are now using AI stock analysis to evaluate Tesla’s long-term growth potential based on innovation and market trends.
Will this deal benefit Tesla in the long term?
Yes, if executed well, it could create new revenue streams and strengthen Tesla’s position in renewable energy.
Why did Tesla choose Chinese suppliers?
China offers cost-efficient manufacturing and advanced solar technology.
Is Tesla becoming an energy company?
Tesla is evolving into a broader energy company, combining vehicles, solar, and storage solutions.
Investors rely on data to make decisions.
Modern trading tools provide real-time insights into stock performance, market trends, and financial metrics.
These tools help investors track Tesla’s progress and evaluate opportunities.
Data-driven analysis is becoming essential in today’s market.
The latest move by Tesla to negotiate a 2.9 billion dollar solar equipment deal marks a significant step in its clean energy journey.
The expansion into large-scale solar infrastructure highlights Tesla’s ambition to lead in renewable energy.
While challenges remain, the long-term potential is substantial.
For investors, Tesla represents a blend of innovation, growth, and risk.
Understanding the company’s strategy and market dynamics will be key to making informed decisions.
Tesla is negotiating a deal with Chinese suppliers to purchase solar equipment for large-scale energy expansion.

Tesla aims to diversify its business and build a complete clean energy ecosystem.

Short term costs may rise, but long term growth potential could improve investor confidence.

The content shared by Meyka AI PTY LTD is solely for research and informational purposes. Meyka is not a financial advisory service, and the information provided should not be considered investment or trading advice.
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Grundy Co. Board Approves Extending Two Solar Farm Projects in Coal City – WCSJ News

Grundy Co. Board Approves Extending Two Solar Farm Projects in Coal City  WCSJ News
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‘Miracle’ solar tech passes key milestone – the-independent.com

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Perovskite material helps break the 30% efficiency mark for the first time in a major boost to renewable energy
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Researchers in Switzerland have set an efficiency record for a new type of solar cell that rivals satellite-grade solar panels at a fraction of the cost.
A team at the Ecole Polytechnique Fédérale de Lausanne (EPFL), together with the Swiss Center for Electronics and Microtechnology (CSEM), achieved an efficiency rate of 30.02 per cent with the triple-junction device, beating the previous record of 27.1 per cent.
The breakthrough combined conventional silicon cells with perovskite, which has been hailed as a ‘miracle material’ for its ability to push efficiencies beyond standard limits.
“We show that with clever design and processing, we can approach performance levels traditionally reserved for the most expensive III–V multi-junction solar cells used in space, which are composed of multiple semiconductor layers,” said Kerem Artuk, a researcher at CSEM, who worked on the breakthrough.
“These can reach up to 37 per cent efficiency, and cost around 1,000 times more than terrestrial cells per watt. Our approach opens the door to a new generation of industrially viable, high-efficiency multi-junction photovoltaics.”
Combining perovskite with silicon is not only more cost efficient, it also allows more of the solar spectrum to be captured and converted into electricity.
These benefits have made the material increasingly important for photovoltaic research, however they have previously proved difficult to scale beyond a laboratory setting.
Upgrades to the triple-junction design have helped improve both the performance and the resilience of these solar cells in recent years.
“Our first demonstration in 2018 had only 13 per cent efficiency, so reaching over 30 per cent efficiency today in a triple-junction device is a remarkable achievement,” said Christophe Ballif, who heads the Photovoltaics and Thin-Film Electronic Laboratory at EPFL.
“Triple-junction solar cells have an even higher efficiency potential compared to single junction and tandem – well above 40 per cent.”
The findings were published in the journal Nature this week, in a paper titled ‘Triple-junction solar cells with improved carrier and photon management’.
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Flexible Solar Panels Market – Global Industry Analysis, Trends & Forecast (2024-2032) – openPR.com

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Electrum building 100 MWp solar farm for Afcon in Poland – Renewables Now

Electrum building 100 MWp solar farm for Afcon in Poland  Renewables Now
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