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CIS modules to power largest commercial California plants

The completed project between Solar Frontier and enXco is set to become the world’s largest solar installations

Solar Frontier and enXco have signed a module supply agreement for up to 150 megawatts peak (MWp) of Solar Frontier’s CIS solar modules.

A firm order for 26 MWp was completed and delivered in the last quarter of 2011 for the Catalina Solar Project located in Kern County, California.

The second plant in California will be built in two phases – the first phase of approximately 60 MWp is targeted to go online by the end of 2012 and the remainder of the project by June 2013. The plant will generate enough clean energy to power the equivalent of about 35,000 homes annually and will offset about 74,000 metric tons of greenhouse gas emissions every year.

“This is a landmark moment not only for Solar Frontier but the CI(G)S industry as a whole,” said Gregory W. Ashley, chief operating officer of Solar Frontier Americas. “We have demonstrated successfully that the unique characteristics of CIS technology are compelling to major customers by delivering more KWh over the lifetime of a project for a lower cost. We see this project as a launch pad for ever greater CIS achievement in the United States and across the world. We are pleased to work with enXco, which has shown its commitment to the industry by continuing to develop and build utility-scale solar projects.”

“We are excited to deploy Solar Frontier’s thin film technology,” said Kristina Peterson, Vice President, Solar Business Unit for enXco. “With its gigawatt-scale production capacity, and favourable energy production profile, Solar Frontier and its parent company Showa Shell Sekiyu, have positioned themselves through a long and proven development process to be able to meet the supply expectations required for such large utility-scale projects.”
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