[學術]India angles to be solar-industry hub
http://www.eetimes.com/showArticle.jhtml?articleID=200900247
BENGALURU, India — India does not yet have a semiconductor-manufacturing plant in operation, and opinion is still divided whether the country needs one. But given the frequent power outages throughout the country, the story is quite different for indigenous solar-cell manufacturing.
The Indian government announced incentives for manufacturing solar cells and panels earlier this year, and it has targeted meeting 10 percent of the country's power needs through renewable energy by 2012. That has spurred a flurry of announcements by companies looking to join the nascent solar industry here.
EDA industry veteran Prabhu Goel's Signet Solar has announced the most ambitious plans thus far—an investment of $2 billion over 10 years to set up three plants in India. Signet operates a plant in Germany and expects to leverage that experience to ramp production here.
Signet will conduct R&D in Germany and India and try to drive down costs though product innovation, said Goel, Signet's chairman. The company is courting customers among photovoltaic system integrators and installers of solar farms.
Tata BP Solar, a joint venture between the Tata Group of India and BP Solar of the United Kingdom, operates one of the oldest solar-energy equipment manufacturing plants in India, near Bengaluru. The plant is being expanded now, at an additional investment of $100 million.
Homegrown storage-hardware manufacturer Moser Baer has announced it is building $250 million plant to make solar energy products in northern India using technology from Applied Materials Inc. "The global photovoltaics market is on a high-growth curve, and sales are expected to grow by six times, to $40 billion, by 2010. We believe our expertise in related production technologies will help us get a leadership position in the global PV industry," said Ravi Khanna, CEO of Moser Baer Photo Voltaic Ltd.
(MBPVL).
When operational, the MBPVL plant is expected to generate annual sales approaching $100 million, largely but not exclusively through exports. The photovoltaics business is not capital-intensive and promises a high return," Khanna said.
U.S.-based Cypress Semiconductor, meanwhile, is reportedly considering a $50 million facility to make solar cells and wafers near the southern Indian city of Hyderabad, likely through SunPower Corp., in which it holds a majority stake.
SunTechnics Energy, a subsidiary of Germany's SunTechnics Gmbh, has a manufacturing plant in Bengaluru and plans to expand it. "The upsurge in demand in India, by nearly 25 percent annually, is prompting several players to put in huge investments. Companies make these investments [largely] for export reasons, to cater to global needs, which are far greater than local needs," said Rajesh Bhat, director and country manager for SunTechnics Energy Systems Pvt. Ltd.
Bhat believes the cost of solar cells must come down to encourage solar-energy adoption. Adoption of nanotechnology can help on the cost front, Bhat said, but "the day the government introduces attractive feed-in tariffs, incentives to individuals and industries, renewable energy will become the next booming industry in India, after software services."
MBPVL is also evaluating emerging technologies, including nanotechnology and concentrator photovoltaic cells, to bring down the cost of solar equipment, Khanna said.
Local growth of the solar industry has benefited technology providers such as Applied Materials, which is poised to see a pickup in its business in India. "Innovative incentive schemes are necessary for mass adoption [of solar power] in India. Government policies need to be implemented for market adoption and growth, such as financing schemes for individuals investing to absorb the high upfront costs," said senior director Arulkumar Shanmugasundram.
Applied Materials offers equipment for manufacturing both crystalline silicon technology and thin-film solar panels, Shanmugasundram said. Both technologies have found takers in India, he said.
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