| Hanwha Q Cells to build America’s largest solar module factory in Georgia 
 The  South Korean group plans to commence construction of a facility with an  annual capacity of at least 1.6 GW near the border of Georgia and  Tennessee by the end of this year, with completion slated for 2019.
 
 May 30, 2018  John Weaver
 
 Hanwha Q Cells has announced that its  opening a U.S.-based solar module assembly factory in 2019. The press  release states that while the exact nameplate capacity of the new  facility remains undisclosed, that it will exceed 1.6 GW per year.
 
 This is a greater annual capacity than either  the factory that First Solar is planning for Ohio or the Tesla/Panasonic “gigafactory” in Upstate New York, and thus will be the largest in the Western Hemisphere.
 
 The  facility will be located in Whitfield County, Georgia, near the border  with Tennessee. Hanwha officials said Whitfield County will give it  benefits worth $30 million by offering free land and reducing taxes.
 
 The  company said the product supplied will be passivated emitter rear  contact (PERC) modules for the rooftop and ground-mount segments in the  United States. Solar cells will be supplied to the facility from the  company’s South Korean manufacturing.
 
 The  Korea Times  suggests that this was a last option for the company based upon prior  public statements. CEO Cho Hyun-soo told reporters in January:
 
 
 The  government is considering bringing the case to the WTO, but I’m not  sure about its effectiveness. Building our factory in the U.S. will take  at least two years, so the factory may not have any benefit to  us. Business downsizing in the U.S. is inevitable.South Korea filed a complaint with the World Trade Organization regarding the Section 201 tariffs on solar panels imposed by the Trump Administration.
 
 
 If  the facility were to assemble 1.6 GW worth of solar modules valued at  50¢ per watt, this would avoid $200 million in import duties the 2019  tariff year, $160 million in 2020, and $120 million in the final tariff  year of 2021.
 
 The company will soon have manufacturing capabilities in the United States, South Korea, Malaysia and China.
 
 
 
 Cell tariff looms
 
 This  is far from the first factory announced this year to allow for  tariff-free products. JinkoSolar has announced a 400 megawatt per year  facility in  Jacksonville to support its 2.75 GW supply agreement with NextEra Energy.  SunPower has also purchased the facilities of SolarWorld Americas to move some of the production of its shingled P Series modules stateside.
 
 Itek and  Solartech Universal have also recently announced expansions, and pv magazine staff have learned of expansion plans at  Mission Solar.
 
 The  current production capacity at the Tesla-Panasonic Gigafactory is not  clear, with Tesla maintaining that the factory will reach 1 GW in 2019,  assuming they can ramp without issues. Aside from that plant, pv magazine staff has verified around 1.4 GW of crystalline silicon solar module capacity in the United States.
 
 With  the Tesla/Panasonic Gigafactory reaching full capacity, expansions at  SolarTech Universal and Mission Solar, and the new Hanwha Q Cells  factory, the United States should reach at least 4.4 GW of crystalline  silicon module capacity at the end of 2019, if all factories are  completed on schedule.
 
 Additionally First Solar has announced  plans for a 1.2 GW factory to make its large-format Series 6 thin film  solar modules in Ohio, in addition to the roughly 640 MW at its  Perrysburg, Ohio plant. So if we throw in another 1.84 GW of thin film,  the United States will have the capacity to meet half or more of  projected demand.
 
 SolarWorld Americas and Tesla/Panasonic are the  only crystalline silicon PV makers that have domestic cell production  lines, meaning that module makers will now be pressed up against the 2.5  GW/year exemption for cell imports included in the Section 201 ruling,  and some of the cells imported to make modules will be subject to  tariffs. The solar cell import duty amounts and step down parallel the  assembled solar module tariff.
 
 pv-magazine-usa.com
 |