Re: [RE-wrenches] Chinese solar cells and modules and pricing

2009-06-08 Thread I2P
 
In a message dated 6/7/2009 1:45:42 P.M. Pacific Daylight Time,  
electrich...@yahoo.com writes:

If we buy power from the utility per kW, my vision is some day we can  
orchestrate the same. This will greatly improve our field of interest and  
everyone benefits when performace meets the expectation, regardless of system  
size


Keith, you mean kwh, yes?
 
Don
**Download the AOL Classifieds Toolbar for local deals at your 
fingertips. 
(http://toolbar.aol.com/aolclassifieds/download.html?ncid=emlcntusdown0004)
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Re: [RE-wrenches] Chinese solar cells and modules and pricing

2009-06-08 Thread Keith Cronin
Yes Don, thanks for the added h





From: i...@aol.com i...@aol.com
To: re-wrenches@lists.re-wrenches.org
Sent: Monday, June 8, 2009 7:39:39 AM
Subject: Re: [RE-wrenches] Chinese solar cells and modules and pricing

In a message dated 6/7/2009 1:45:42 P.M. Pacific Daylight Time,
electrich...@yahoo.com writes:
If we buy power from the utility per kW, my vision is some day we can 
orchestrate the same. This will greatly improve our field of interest and 
everyone benefits when performace meets the expectation, regardless of system 
size
Keith, you mean kwh, yes?
 
Don



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Re: [RE-wrenches] Chinese solar cells and modules and pricing

2009-06-08 Thread Keith Cronin
Joel

Chinese quality will improve for sure and trust is something we ought to get 
used to. The Chinese own more US Treasuries than anyone breathing on this 
globe, so we are married at the wallet. If our government can have this type of 
relationship, it is only going to grow as time moves forward. I want to more 
call it a shotgun wedding of sorts- we both need each other and our parents 
(government) have decided it is going to be forever.

Not to digress down an economics discussion, but their sovereign fund is deeply 
embedded in our dollars, even though the yuan has gained more in value over the 
last 4-5 years, hurting their investment in US. Our foreign deficit to them 
will continue, as our national debt was 41% of the economy last year.now 
this is unsustainable...we are over leveraged as a society as a 
whole.

I wonder who the dictators are anymore?





From: Joel Davidson joel.david...@sbcglobal.net
To: RE-wrenches re-wrenches@lists.re-wrenches.org
Sent: Sunday, June 7, 2009 3:05:48 PM
Subject: Re: [RE-wrenches] Chinese solar cells and modules and pricing

  
Chinese quality will improve and price is 
important, but I think that doing business with people who 
you trust and respect comes first. Some of you remember Bill Lamb. The 
Wm. Lamb Company was the world's first PV distributorship. Bill helped a 
lot of us get started in the business. I learned a lot about PV and 
business in general working for Bill. Here's a Bill Lamb true 
story. Before moving to Camarillo, Arco Solar was in 
Chatsworth about 16 miles from the Wm. Lamb Company so Arco referred a 
lot of customers to us. In 1983 or 1984, Arco 
sent three Arab gentlemen to us. They selected about $50,000 
in solar modules and other equipment which was a big sale in those 
days. One of the men pulled out cash and told Bill that 
they plan to buy a lot more solar equipment and will 
buy it all from him if he did not sell to Israel. Bill's reaction 
was immediate. It was the only time I ever saw him get angry. He 
told the men to go to hell and that he would never sell anything 
to them. Then he walked out the building, got in his car, and drove 
away leaving me with the three shocked men. They asked me 
what to do. I told them that Bill was the boss and had the 
final word so they left without buying anything. A few hours 
later, Bill returned and I asked him if he refused to sell to the Arabs 
because they were boycotting Israel. Bill said, It's not just about 
Israel. I refuse to do business with dictators.
Joel Davidson
- Original Message - 
From: Keith  Cronin 
To: RE-wrenches 
Sent: Sunday, June 07, 2009 1:45 PM
Subject: Re: [RE-wrenches] Chinese solar  cells and modules and pricing

PV enthusiasts- 

Perhaps a fresh perspective on these products  deserves some attention after 
the last few thoughts shared by Bill  Joel,  who are industry respected 
stalwarts that deserve and receive alot of respect  from me and the rest of us.
As some of us grew up when we thought Japanese  types of products- from toys to 
cars where less durable, they eventually  created fantastic products to be the 
envy of the world. Just look at most  electronic gadgets and cars 10 years ago 
to draw some distinctions.
A new  dawn has arrived, which parallels this analogy. The Chinese have been 
able to  import the technology and systems to develop world class modules. 
using alot  of the pick and place robots the other contenders are using. 
SunPower makes  the lions share of their products in the Philippines and I 
recall the building  is so large and long, that you can see the curvature of 
the earth.
Just as  the computer revolution started in the US, most of the parts and 
silicon  platforms have been made in Asia. Sure it can take time to polish the  
products, but this is inevitable. China will continue to thrive and deliver  
competitive products that will have quality attributes for years to come as  
their population gets increased education and awareness of what the world  
solar stage demands- inexpensive modules.

The PVUSA facility was circa  1986 and sold to David for a buck in 1997. Alot 
of innovation and  understanding came from those formative years and we as an 
industry are all  grateful. As Joel points out, if you are going with these 
types of products,  check in with your clients, as this is one of the ways to 
monitor any signs  of degradation. Yes, a Barrons report shared with me says 
many of the similar  things about our Chinese manus' thats hard to ignore: 


June 3, 2009, 1:53 pm
China Solar Vendors Slash Module Prices, Analyst 
Says
Posted by Eric Savitz 
Chinese solar vendors are offering modules for prices far below what most  
investors likely suspect, according to Hapoalim Securities analyst Gordon  
Johnson.
In a research note today, Johnson asserts that some of his “most trusted  
industry contacts” say that companies like Yingli (YGE), Suntech (STP) and 
Trina

Re: [RE-wrenches] Chinese solar cells and modules and pricing

2009-06-08 Thread Keith Cronin
Andy, et al

Good questions. The humanitarian one first. If we use a computer or cell phone, 
we are probably contributing to the problem daily as these devices are made 
there. The list of items we manu there is growing that we all seem to use in 
our daily existence. This is a difficult and personal values decision for every 
person to decide.

The ugly word- globalization will be hard to remove from our lexicon, as we are 
all inextricably connected in some direct or indirect way. It is like the 6 
degrees of Kevin Bacon, but perhaps now 5. Live in the Hawaiian village and it 
is perhaps 1 degree.

On the economics equation- sure vote with your wallet to improve the balance of 
payments and perhaps your client base is willing to pay a premium for the made 
is usa solar panels, for example. Perhaps offering the client a choice deserves 
their attention and let them choose. Having the trade imbalance conversation 
might encourage them to choose differently, but this is a good topic for 
discussion. Whether or not we pay for the modules or put them on credit for 
x amount of months with interest (or if we are being offered interest free 
loans) until sold/installed etc. is about the relationship you develop with 
your counterpart. It is the terms that make the difference. A protectionism 
type of only buy from the usa will hurt our economy and the steel industry 
wants to do something similar, but its success is questionable. 

There are no clear answers to our sophisticated global economy, and as Adam 
Smith postulated in 1776, the free market, while appearing chaotic and 
unrestrained, is actually guided to prodice the right amount and variety of 
goods by a so called invisible hand.

My sense is the hand is not invisible anymore...






From: Antony Tersol t...@appliedsolarenergy.com
To: RE-wrenches re-wrenches@lists.re-wrenches.org
Sent: Monday, June 8, 2009 9:09:15 AM
Subject: Re: [RE-wrenches] Chinese solar cells and modules and pricing

So if we should choose to ignore the humanitarian issues, and just
approach it from a financial sense, how does sourcing Chinese modules
improve our balance of payments?



Date: Mon, 8 Jun 2009 11:13:15 -0700 (PDT)
From: Keith Cronin electrich...@yahoo.com
Subject: Re: [RE-wrenches] Chinese solar cells and modules and pricing
To: RE-wrenches re-wrenches@lists.re-wrenches.org
Message-ID: 873930.98326...@web46108.mail.sp1.yahoo.com
Content-Type: text/plain; charset=utf-8

Joel

Chinese quality will improve for sure and trust is something we ought
to get used to. The Chinese own more US Treasuries than anyone
breathing on this globe, so we are married at the wallet. If our
government can have this type of relationship, it is only going to
grow as time moves forward. I want to more call it a shotgun wedding
of sorts- we both need each other and our parents (government) have
decided it is going to be forever.

Not to digress down an economics discussion, but their sovereign fund
is deeply embedded in our dollars, even though the yuan has gained
more in value over the last 4-5 years, hurting their investment in
US. Our foreign deficit to them will continue, as our national debt
was 41% of the economy last year.now this is
unsustainable...we are over leveraged as a society as a
whole.

I wonder who the dictators are anymore?
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Re: [RE-wrenches] Chinese solar cells and modules and pricing

2009-06-08 Thread August Goers
Wrenches,

 

I agree with Bill Brooks on the risks of purchasing from smaller less
established companies. From what I understand these modules are basically
hand made and QC along with material selection can make a major difference
in longevity. 

 

I worked in a Chinese foreign partnership for about five years and learned
among other things that Chinese produced product reliability can vary
drastically. We would purchase say maybe 5000 units from a manufacturer with
perfect results and then purchase 5000 more a year later with 50% failure
rate.

 

Just my 2 cents. -August 

 

August Goers

 

Luminalt Energy Corporation

O:  415.564.7652

M:  415.559.1525

F:   650.244.9167

www.luminalt.com http://www.luminalt.com/ 

aug...@luminalt.com

 

  _  

From: re-wrenches-boun...@lists.re-wrenches.org
[mailto:re-wrenches-boun...@lists.re-wrenches.org] On Behalf Of Keith Cronin
Sent: Monday, June 08, 2009 12:44 PM
To: RE-wrenches
Subject: Re: [RE-wrenches] Chinese solar cells and modules and pricing

 

Andy, et al

Good questions. The humanitarian one first. If we use a computer or cell
phone, we are probably contributing to the problem daily as these devices
are made there. The list of items we manu there is growing that we all seem
to use in our daily existence. This is a difficult and personal values
decision for every person to decide.

The ugly word- globalization will be hard to remove from our lexicon, as we
are all inextricably connected in some direct or indirect way. It is like
the 6 degrees of Kevin Bacon, but perhaps now 5. Live in the Hawaiian
village and it is perhaps 1 degree.

On the economics equation- sure vote with your wallet to improve the balance
of payments and perhaps your client base is willing to pay a premium for the
made is usa solar panels, for example. Perhaps offering the client a choice
deserves their attention and let them choose. Having the trade imbalance
conversation might encourage them to choose differently, but this is a good
topic for discussion. Whether or not we pay for the modules or put them on
credit for x amount of months with interest (or if we are being offered
interest free loans) until sold/installed etc. is about the relationship you
develop with your counterpart. It is the terms that make the difference. A
protectionism type of only buy from the usa will hurt our economy and the
steel industry wants to do something similar, but its success is
questionable. 

There are no clear answers to our sophisticated global economy, and as Adam
Smith postulated in 1776, the free market, while appearing chaotic and
unrestrained, is actually guided to prodice the right amount and variety of
goods by a so called invisible hand.

My sense is the hand is not invisible anymore...

 

  _  

From: Antony Tersol t...@appliedsolarenergy.com
To: RE-wrenches re-wrenches@lists.re-wrenches.org
Sent: Monday, June 8, 2009 9:09:15 AM
Subject: Re: [RE-wrenches] Chinese solar cells and modules and pricing

So if we should choose to ignore the humanitarian issues, and just
approach it from a financial sense, how does sourcing Chinese modules
improve our balance of payments?



Date: Mon, 8 Jun 2009 11:13:15 -0700 (PDT)
From: Keith Cronin electrich...@yahoo.com
Subject: Re: [RE-wrenches] Chinese solar cells and modules and pricing
To: RE-wrenches re-wrenches@lists.re-wrenches.org
Message-ID: 873930.98326...@web46108.mail.sp1.yahoo.com
Content-Type: text/plain; charset=utf-8

Joel

Chinese quality will improve for sure and trust is something we ought
to get used to. The Chinese own more US Treasuries than anyone
breathing on this globe, so we are married at the wallet. If our
government can have this type of relationship, it is only going to
grow as time moves forward. I want to more call it a shotgun wedding
of sorts- we both need each other and our parents (government) have
decided it is going to be forever.

Not to digress down an economics discussion, but their sovereign fund
is deeply embedded in our dollars, even though the yuan has gained
more in value over the last 4-5 years, hurting their investment in
US. Our foreign deficit to them will continue, as our national debt
was 41% of the economy last year.now this is
unsustainable...we are over leveraged as a society as a
whole.

I wonder who the dictators are anymore?
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Re: [RE-wrenches] Chinese solar cells and modules and pricing

2009-06-08 Thread Michael Welch
Hi gang. Let's move the non-wrenching issues somewhere else, please, like the 
RE-Bitching list.

Thanks, and if you have any questions or concerns about this please contact me 
off-list.


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Re: [RE-wrenches] Chinese solar cells and modules and pricing

2009-06-07 Thread Joel Davidson
I have a lot of respect for Bill, not just because he sometimes agrees with 
me (smile), but because he worked at Davis California PVUSA and other places 
and saw a lot of innovative, but flawed PV. He knows first-hand that dozens 
of PV companies and/or products have come and gone in the search for the 
$0.10/kWh holy grail.


I wish the Chinese well, but am concerned about the wisdom of buying Chinese 
modules. On the one hand, I welcome China into the league of nations and 
support their progress toward democracy. Hopefully, Chinese national and 
local dictators will grow up and become civilized. On the other hand, latest 
reports from China, according to Hapoalim Securities analyst Gordon Johnson, 
is that Chinese solar module factory workers are willing to work for 
little-to-no-pay. There's a big difference between volunteering in the war 
of economic imperialism against the West and the volunteer work Wrenches 
perform in their communities and around the world.


But back to nuts-and-volts. Last year China became the largest producer of 
crystalline silicon solar cells. Although some companies admit that their 
modules are made in China, few companies with factories outside of China say 
they build their modules with cells outsourced from China. This is not all 
bad news because crystalline silicon cells are some of the most stable 
products ever made. However, you do have to protect yourself and your 
customers' investments, especially if you are a California contractor 
required to give 10-year system warranties. I recommend getting each 
module's IV curve, keeping the IV curves in your customer file, performing 
pre-installation tests (at least Voc and Isc), and performing annual systems 
inspections and tests. Look for cell-tab corrosion, front and backsheet 
delamination, and discoloration. Most customers will pay to see you once a 
year if your manner is professional and your service charge is reasonable.


Joel Davidson


- Original Message - 
From: Bill Brooks billbroo...@yahoo.com

To: 'RE-wrenches' re-wrenches@lists.re-wrenches.org
Sent: Saturday, June 06, 2009 10:19 PM
Subject: Re: [RE-wrenches] Chinese solar cells and modules and pricing



All,

How many of these Chinese manufacturers will still be in existence in 5
years (probably less than half)? Are you really willing to risk a company
and reputation for a few pennies per watt? Certainly several of the big
companies are likely to survive, but you are playing a new game of 
Chinese

roulette with many of these companies.

These are manufacturing companies, not stable companies with a long past 
and

future. The value proposition is so dramatically different from a major
company to one of these Chinese manufacturing companies to make the
comparison nearly idiotic. Most of the installers using these products 
have

way more guts than I have. Many will find their guts on the ground as the
get disemboweled by bad choices. Don't you love the imagery.

Yingli's one of the big companies now, they might survive. I'm sure they 
are

learning every month that they proceed how to better manufacture modules.
They have been a player for two years--no major problems--YET. How does a
year in the field show that a company is doing everything correctly? Oh, 
and

their fuse size is 10 amps on an 8 amp Isc module. They obviously are not
all that sophisticated.

Folks, you need to let the dumb contractors screw up and buy the cheap
stuff. Now, more than ever, you have to sell on brand. The more the young
Chinese stuff gets in the field and craps out, the worse our industry is
going to take it on the chin in the public eye. It's just not worth the
price difference. As Joel points out, let the multi-MW projects make the
stupid mistakes--that will just scare away the capital investment--oh wait 
a

minute--we really need that.

Bill.


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Re: [RE-wrenches] Chinese solar cells and modules and pricing

2009-06-07 Thread Keith Cronin
 we will have for some time, as 
this is the leading metric and I think it is more than just a few pennies per 
watt, but the delta is significantly wider. On the residential scale, of the 
2-5kW range, not as influencial, but do a 50kW and north of this and the impact 
is tangible. in our free market economy you can understand a company offering 
these products and really stinging the company offering Solarworld (oh, wait - 
Arco, Siemens, Shell) for a particular project. Mods represent the largest 
piece of the solar pies project costs, so it is plausible to look for 
alternatives.


A way to navitage through this minefield of uncertanty, is we need as an 
industry to perhaps move the conversation from cost per watt to a performance 
based reality. If we buy power from the utility per kW, my vision is some day 
we can orchestrate the same. This will greatly improve our field of interest 
and everyone benefits when performace meets the expectation, regardless of 
system size. Our treasury, at the fed and state levels will pay proportionatly 
for actual energy created, levelizing the conversation about subsidies with 
real time, empirical data to back up the efficacy of what we are doing.

For a better tomorrow~

Keith





From: Joel Davidson joel.david...@sbcglobal.net
To: RE-wrenches re-wrenches@lists.re-wrenches.org
Sent: Sunday, June 7, 2009 7:11:11 AM
Subject: Re: [RE-wrenches] Chinese solar cells and modules and pricing

I have a lot of respect for Bill, not just because he sometimes agrees with me 
(smile), but because he worked at Davis California PVUSA and other places and 
saw a lot of innovative, but flawed PV. He knows first-hand that dozens of PV 
companies and/or products have come and gone in the search for the $0.10/kWh 
holy grail.

I wish the Chinese well, but am concerned about the wisdom of buying Chinese 
modules. On the one hand, I welcome China into the league of nations and 
support their progress toward democracy. Hopefully, Chinese national and local 
dictators will grow up and become civilized. On the other hand, latest reports 
from China, according to Hapoalim Securities analyst Gordon Johnson, is that 
Chinese solar module factory workers are willing to work for little-to-no-pay. 
There's a big difference between volunteering in the war of economic 
imperialism against the West and the volunteer work Wrenches perform in their 
communities and around the world.

But back to nuts-and-volts. Last year China became the largest producer of 
crystalline silicon solar cells. Although some companies admit that their 
modules are made in China, few companies with factories outside of China say 
they build their modules with cells outsourced from China. This is not all bad 
news because crystalline silicon cells are some of the most stable products 
ever made. However, you do have to protect yourself and your customers' 
investments, especially if you are a California contractor required to give 
10-year system warranties. I recommend getting each module's IV curve, keeping 
the IV curves in your customer file, performing pre-installation tests (at 
least Voc and Isc), and performing annual systems inspections and tests. Look 
for cell-tab corrosion, front and backsheet delamination, and discoloration. 
Most customers will pay to see you once a year if your manner is professional 
and your service charge is reasonable.

Joel Davidson


- Original Message - From: Bill Brooks billbroo...@yahoo.com
To: 'RE-wrenches' re-wrenches@lists.re-wrenches.org
Sent: Saturday, June 06, 2009 10:19 PM
Subject: Re: [RE-wrenches] Chinese solar cells and modules and pricing


 All,
 
 How many of these Chinese manufacturers will still be in existence in 5
 years (probably less than half)? Are you really willing to risk a company
 and reputation for a few pennies per watt? Certainly several of the big
 companies are likely to survive, but you are playing a new game of Chinese
 roulette with many of these companies.
 
 These are manufacturing companies, not stable companies with a long past and
 future. The value proposition is so dramatically different from a major
 company to one of these Chinese manufacturing companies to make the
 comparison nearly idiotic. Most of the installers using these products have
 way more guts than I have. Many will find their guts on the ground as the
 get disemboweled by bad choices. Don't you love the imagery.
 
 Yingli's one of the big companies now, they might survive. I'm sure they are
 learning every month that they proceed how to better manufacture modules.
 They have been a player for two years--no major problems--YET. How does a
 year in the field show that a company is doing everything correctly? Oh, and
 their fuse size is 10 amps on an 8 amp Isc module. They obviously are not
 all that sophisticated.
 
 Folks, you need to let the dumb contractors screw up and buy the cheap
 stuff. Now, more than ever, you have to sell on brand

Re: [RE-wrenches] Chinese solar cells and modules and pricing

2009-06-07 Thread Joel Davidson
Chinese quality will improve and price is important, but I think that doing 
business with people who you trust and respect comes first. Some of you 
remember Bill Lamb. The Wm. Lamb Company was the world's first PV 
distributorship. Bill helped a lot of us get started in the business. I learned 
a lot about PV and business in general working for Bill. Here's a Bill Lamb 
true story. Before moving to Camarillo, Arco Solar was in Chatsworth about 16 
miles from the Wm. Lamb Company so Arco referred a lot of customers to us. In 
1983 or 1984, Arco sent three Arab gentlemen to us. They selected about $50,000 
in solar modules and other equipment which was a big sale in those days. One of 
the men pulled out cash and told Bill that they plan to buy a lot more solar 
equipment and will buy it all from him if he did not sell to Israel. Bill's 
reaction was immediate. It was the only time I ever saw him get angry. He told 
the men to go to hell and that he would never sell anything to them. Then he 
walked out the building, got in his car, and drove away leaving me with the 
three shocked men. They asked me what to do. I told them that Bill was the boss 
and had the final word so they left without buying anything. A few hours later, 
Bill returned and I asked him if he refused to sell to the Arabs because they 
were boycotting Israel. Bill said, It's not just about Israel. I refuse to do 
business with dictators.
Joel Davidson
  - Original Message - 
  From: Keith Cronin 
  To: RE-wrenches 
  Sent: Sunday, June 07, 2009 1:45 PM
  Subject: Re: [RE-wrenches] Chinese solar cells and modules and pricing


  PV enthusiasts- 

  Perhaps a fresh perspective on these products deserves some attention after 
the last few thoughts shared by Bill  Joel, who are industry respected 
stalwarts that deserve and receive alot of respect from me and the rest of us.
  As some of us grew up when we thought Japanese types of products- from toys 
to cars where less durable, they eventually created fantastic products to be 
the envy of the world. Just look at most electronic gadgets and cars 10 years 
ago to draw some distinctions.
  A new dawn has arrived, which parallels this analogy. The Chinese have been 
able to import the technology and systems to develop world class modules. using 
alot of the pick and place robots the other contenders are using. SunPower 
makes the lions share of their products in the Philippines and I recall the 
building is so large and long, that you can see the curvature of the earth.
  Just as the computer revolution started in the US, most of the parts and 
silicon platforms have been made in Asia. Sure it can take time to polish the 
products, but this is inevitable. China will continue to thrive and deliver 
competitive products that will have quality attributes for years to come as 
their population gets increased education and awareness of what the world solar 
stage demands- inexpensive modules.

  The PVUSA facility was circa 1986 and sold to David for a buck in 1997. Alot 
of innovation and understanding came from those formative years and we as an 
industry are all grateful. As Joel points out, if you are going with these 
types of products, check in with your clients, as this is one of the ways to 
monitor any signs of degradation. Yes, a Barrons report shared with me says 
many of the similar things about our Chinese manus' thats hard to ignore: 


  June 3, 2009, 1:53 pm
  China Solar Vendors Slash Module Prices, Analyst Says
  Posted by Eric Savitz 
  Chinese solar vendors are offering modules for prices far below what most 
investors likely suspect, according to Hapoalim Securities analyst Gordon 
Johnson.

  In a research note today, Johnson asserts that some of his “most trusted 
industry contacts” say that companies like Yingli (YGE), Suntech (STP) and 
Trina Solar (TSL) are offering modules for sale at $1.70-$1.80/watt, or 
1.21-1.28 Euros/watt. He notes that at the recent Intersolar conference, the 
talk was that solar modules were priced in the 1.60-1.70 Euros/watt range.

  Johnson contends that U.S. investors may be underestimating the ability of 
Chinese solar module companies to significantly lower their non-silicon costs - 
specifically, by cutting wages. He writes that “we are hearing that Chinese 
solar module factory workers are willing to work for little-to-no-pay” in order 
to improve their company’s competitiveness and “as a matter of national pride.” 
According to Johnson, volumes available at the lower price levels is 
effectively unlimited.

  Johnson, who already had been bearish on the sector, notes that there are 1.5 
GW of solar module inventory in the channel, and that Spain, which in 2008 
accounted for nearly 50% of global module consumption, “has basically gone to 
zero.” His view: “At the risk of stating the obvious, this does not bode well 
for U.S./European solar module vendors given the commodity underpinnings which 
define this space,” he writes

[RE-wrenches] Chinese solar cells and modules and pricing

2009-06-06 Thread Marco Mangelsdorf
I'm seeing ~ $2.60/watt from a major Chinese manufacturer for a modest
volume purchase.

What are you all seeing as far as $/watt?

marco

Joel,
Since late last year we've been stocking the Yingli 175w single-crystal
modules. They seem dependable, haven't heard of any problems with them.
Earlier in the year they were a low-cost choice for very cost-sensitive
projects, but they were a 1st choice for very, very few dealers. Lately,
with all PV prices tumbling, they've been even less attractive. I think the
immediate future for Chinese modules will be developing country projects,
and very large projects where price points matter more than a dependable
track record or possible warranty service in a decade or two.

Cheers,
Doug Pratt
DC Power Systems

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Re: [RE-wrenches] Chinese solar cells and modules and pricing

2009-06-06 Thread Bill Brooks
All,

How many of these Chinese manufacturers will still be in existence in 5
years (probably less than half)? Are you really willing to risk a company
and reputation for a few pennies per watt? Certainly several of the big
companies are likely to survive, but you are playing a new game of Chinese
roulette with many of these companies.

These are manufacturing companies, not stable companies with a long past and
future. The value proposition is so dramatically different from a major
company to one of these Chinese manufacturing companies to make the
comparison nearly idiotic. Most of the installers using these products have
way more guts than I have. Many will find their guts on the ground as the
get disemboweled by bad choices. Don't you love the imagery.

Yingli's one of the big companies now, they might survive. I'm sure they are
learning every month that they proceed how to better manufacture modules.
They have been a player for two years--no major problems--YET. How does a
year in the field show that a company is doing everything correctly? Oh, and
their fuse size is 10 amps on an 8 amp Isc module. They obviously are not
all that sophisticated.

Folks, you need to let the dumb contractors screw up and buy the cheap
stuff. Now, more than ever, you have to sell on brand. The more the young
Chinese stuff gets in the field and craps out, the worse our industry is
going to take it on the chin in the public eye. It's just not worth the
price difference. As Joel points out, let the multi-MW projects make the
stupid mistakes--that will just scare away the capital investment--oh wait a
minute--we really need that.

Bill.


-Original Message-
From: re-wrenches-boun...@lists.re-wrenches.org
[mailto:re-wrenches-boun...@lists.re-wrenches.org] On Behalf Of Marco
Mangelsdorf
Sent: Saturday, June 06, 2009 12:30 PM
To: 'RE-wrenches'
Subject: [RE-wrenches] Chinese solar cells and modules and pricing

I'm seeing ~ $2.60/watt from a major Chinese manufacturer for a modest
volume purchase.

What are you all seeing as far as $/watt?

marco

Joel,
Since late last year we've been stocking the Yingli 175w single-crystal
modules. They seem dependable, haven't heard of any problems with them.
Earlier in the year they were a low-cost choice for very cost-sensitive
projects, but they were a 1st choice for very, very few dealers. Lately,
with all PV prices tumbling, they've been even less attractive. I think the
immediate future for Chinese modules will be developing country projects,
and very large projects where price points matter more than a dependable
track record or possible warranty service in a decade or two.

Cheers,
Doug Pratt
DC Power Systems

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