Solar panel maker hits milestone
Yingli Americas' projects span the residential, commercial and utility markets, and they include more than 28,000 homes, 3,000 institutions and businesses and 50 utility-scale projects. According to the California Solar Initiative, 1 gW of installed PV facilities would meet the energy needs of more than 200,000 average American households, according to a company press release.
Yingli Green Energy's PV modules are used by many iconic institutions in the Americas, including Harvard University, Kaiser Permanente hospitals, the New York Jets team headquarters, and Rio de Janeiro's Maracana Stadium.
"Our modules are among the most reliable and best-performing in the industry. They have even excelled in industry-wide energy yield tests conducted by independent testing labs," Petrina said.
"At our PV Testing Lab in California, we run reliability tests using customized testing protocols that far exceed certification grade tests."
Chinese solar-panel makers have been hit extremely hard by shrinking demand for their products since the European Union and the US imposed anti-dumping and anti-subsidy tariffs on them last year.
In November, the US International Trade Commission voted to slap a unilateral tariff of 36 percent on Suntech Power Holdings Co Ltd's solar cells, a panel component, made in China. The Chinese solar-panel manufacturer closed its first and only US manufacturing plant in April of this year.
Petrina noted that the market fundamentals of supply and demand are improving across the various channels Yingli operates in.
"We supply trade-compliant modules to the US, and ensure that they're of the same high quality that we are known for. We are also pleased to put the trade case behind us. Milestones like today's are indicative of our commitment to success," he said.
Petrina believes this upward trend is likely to continue in the US.
"We see tremendous opportunities across all segments of the US market, from distribution to residential, commercial, institutional and utility projects," he said.