While Nanosolar hasn’t been entirely secretive about its technology, with chief executive Martin Rosencheisen showing off a rapid manufacturing technique early in summer, but apparently it didn’t want details leaking on this giant-sized investment until necessary. Word slipped out in April about $50 million of the total, but at the time, Nanosolar didn’t want to talk — and it’s now clear why.
[aditude-amp id="flyingcarpet" targeting='{"env":"staging","page_type":"article","post_id":97047,"post_type":"story","post_chan":"none","tags":null,"ai":false,"category":"none","all_categories":"enterprise,","session":"D"}']The race for funds, and ever-larger production targets, is definitely on for thin film. Secretive thin-film silicon company Optisolar has raised over $200 million this year, and Nanosolar’s thin-film CIGS competitor Miasole is trying to close on a similar amount. And while dozens of other startups are also on the hunt, large companies like Oerlikon Solar and Applied Materials are pouring money into ventures of their own.
In many ways, it looks like an overheated sector. But on the other hand, Optisolar’s recent deal with PG&E to provide 550 megawatts of electricity suggests that the potential for thin film panels is larger than previously expected, even when considering one analyst firm’s prediction earlier this year that the sector will grow at 45 percent annually.
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At the moment, Nanosolar is still working toward a gigawatt of annual manufacturing capacity, but it will grow beyond that after completing its plants in Palo Alto, Calif. and Germany.
The backers in the funding were mainly private equity firms and large companies: EDF Energies Nouvelles, AES Solar, Riverstone Holdings, Energy Capital Partners, the Carlyle Group, Lone Pine Capital, and the Skoll Foundation. Previous backers GLG Partners and Beck Energy also joined in. The company has taken almost half a billion dollars to date, including grants.
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