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Qcells

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
(Redirected fromHanwha Q CELLS)
Photovoltaic cell manufacturer

Qcells
IndustryPhotovoltaics
Headquarters86,Cheonggyecheon-ro,Jung-gu,,
Area served
Worldwide
Key people
  • Andy Park (SeungDeok Park) (CEO)
Products
ParentHanwha Solutions
WebsiteOfficial website in English
Official website in Korean

Qcells (formerly known as Hanwha Qcells) is a manufacturer ofphotovoltaic cells. The company is headquartered inSeoul, South Korea, after being founded in 1999 inBitterfeld-Wolfen, Germany, where the company still has its engineering offices. Qcells was purchased out of bankruptcy in August 2012 by theHanwha Group, a South Korean business conglomerate. Qcells now operates as a subsidiary ofHanwha Solutions, the group's energy and petrochemical company.

Qcells has manufacturing facilities in theUnited States,Malaysia, andSouth Korea. The company was thesixth-largest producer of solar cells in 2019, with shipments totaling 7.3gigawatts.

History

[edit]
Qcells manufacturing plant in Dalton, Georgia, United States
Qcells
Hangul
한화큐셀
Revised RomanizationHanhwa Kyusel
McCune–ReischauerHanhwa K'yusel

On 23 July 2001, the company produced its first working polycrystalline solar cell on its new production line in Thalheim, Germany. Qcells would grow to become one of the world's largest solar cell manufacturers, employing over 2,000 people and encouraging other companies to open facilities in the surrounding area, which would come to be known as Germany's "Solar Valley".[1][2]

The company went public on 5 October 2005, listing on theFrankfurt Stock Exchange. High share prices during theinitial public offering poured money into the company and made the founders wealthy. Lemoine died in 2006, and shortly thereafter, Fest and Grunow left the company to go back into research. Only Milner remained and served as the company's CEO.[1]

In 2005, Qcells established theCdTe PV manufacturer Calyxo. In November 2007, Qcells agreed a deal with Solar Fields, which intellectual property and assets were merged into Calyxo's newly established subsidiary Calyxo USA.[3][4] In 2011, Solar Fields took over Calyxo.[5]

In 2008, Qcells acquired 17.9% stake inRenewable Energy Corporation.[6] This stake was sold in 2009.[7] At the same year, Qcells' subsidiary Sontor merged with a thin-film company Sunfilm.[8]

In June 2009, the company acquiredSolibro, a joint venture it had established in 2006.[9] Solibro manufactured thin-film solar cells based on copper-indium-gallium-diselenide. These modules were marketed until the sale of Solibro toHanergy in 2012.[10]

Qcells was hit hard by theGreat Recession in late 2008, with share prices slipping from over 80 euros to under 20. In response, the company laid off 500 employees. Milner resigned as CEO in early 2010, and by the end of the year, the company's finances appeared to stabilize. Just a few months later, in 2011, the global solar cell market crashed, with production overcapacity driving prices extremely low. Qcells saw sales slide by around 1 billion euros, ran a loss of 846 million euros and on 3 April 2011, the company filed for bankruptcy.

In August 2012, theHanwha Group, a large South Korean business conglomerate, agreed to acquire Qcells, saying that it presented synergy opportunities.[11] In 2010,[12] Hanwha had purchased a 49.99%[13] share in Chinese manufacturer Solarfun which had been renamed Hanwha SolarOne. SolarOne had been producing solar cells for Qcells under contract.[13] Due to high costs, production in Germany ceased in 2015, with Hanwha moving the work to its SolarOne facilities in China and newly opened manufacturing facilities in Malaysia and South Korea. In 2019, Qcells opened its first manufacturing facility in the United States.[14]

In recent years, Hanwha has since worked to simplify the structure of units, merging SolarOne into Qcells in December 2014,[15] merging Qcells and the company's Advanced Materials (petrochemicals) group in 2018,[16] Qcells & Advanced Materials acquired a solar company operated by the Hanwha Chemicals group in 2019,[17] and in 2020 Hanwha Qcells & Advanced Materials merged with Hanwha Chemical to form the Hanwha Solutions group.[18]

In January 2023, Qcells made a commitment to invest more than $2.5 billion to build a fully integrated, silicon-based solar supply chain in the United States from raw material to finished module with full production expected by the end of 2024.[19] In August 2024, Qcells received a conditional commitment for a future $1.45 billion loan from the US department of energy to help finance the construction of a fully integrated solar cell manufuacturing facility north ofAtlanta, Georgia. The loan guarantee was approved in part by Qcells receiving an order from Microsoft for 12 gigawatts of solar panels through 2032 thus demonstrating a market for their product.[20][21] The loan was finalized in December 2024.[22]

In August 2023, the U.S. Department of Commerce ruled that Qcells had not circumvented tariffs on Chinese-made goods following an investigation involving multiple photovoltaic cell manufacturers.[23][24]

In July 2024, it was reported that Hanwha Qcells' factory in Dalton, Georgia, was importing cells made with Chinese wafers from TCL Zhonghuan Renewable Energy Technology Co. and Gokin Solar Co., wafer suppliers who source Xinjiang, China polysilicon from Daqo and GCL, both of which are on the UFLPA Entity List. However, the report had stated that there is no evidence that components containing the banned polysilicon have turned up in Qcells panels.[25]

Large manufacturers have their own separate duty rates. In April, 2025, the US Department of Commerce (DOC) has issued anti-dumping and anti-subsidy tariffs against solar cell imports from Thailand, Vietnam, Malaysia and Cambodia. Commerce applied final AD rates of up to 125.37% and anti-subsidy (CVD) rates of up to 3,403.96% to solar cells imported from Cambodia; up to 81.24% AD and up to 168.8% CVD rates to Malaysian products; up to 202.9% AD and up to 799.55% CVD to Thailand; and up to 271.28% AD and up to 542.64% CVD to Vietnam. The lowest CVD rate was applied to Qcells in Malaysia (14.64%), where it also received a 0% AD margin.[26]

2024-2025 Hanwha Group and REC Silicon

[edit]

In late 2024,REC Silicon, a major polysilicon supplier in whichHanwha Solutions (the parent of Qcells) is the majority shareholder, ceased operations at itsMoses Lake, Washington, facility. The shutdown followed Hanwha Qcells’ termination of a long-term supply agreement, citing a failed product qualification test. Hanwha Solutions, recognizing its responsibility as REC Silicon’s largest shareholder amid the company’s deep financial distress and strategic challenges, has decided to launch a voluntary tender offer to acquire all shares and delist REC from the Oslo Stock Exchange. Most recently, Hanwha Group and REC Silicon have reached a USD 6.5 million short-term loan agreement - the former funding the latter's urgent operational capital needs.[27][28]

Operations

[edit]

Qcells develops and producesmonocrystaline silicon photovoltaic cells and solar panels. It produces and installs PV systems for commercial, industrial, and residential applications and provides EPC services for large-scale solar power plants.

The company's engineering offices are located at the original headquarters in Thalheim, Germany. Production facilities are located inDalton, Georgia, andCartersville, Georgia, in the United States;Cyberjaya in Malaysia; andJincheon in South Korea.

See also

[edit]

References

[edit]
  1. ^abStange, Jennifer (14 April 2012)."Keeping solar power hopes alive". Deutsche Welle. Retrieved19 June 2019.
  2. ^"Hanwha Q.Cells officially launched".Eco-Business. 25 October 2012. Retrieved19 June 2019.
  3. ^"Q-Cells AG Partners With Solar Fields LLC".Solar Industry Magazine. 2 November 2007. Retrieved19 June 2019.
  4. ^Pakulski, Gary T. (6 November 2007)."Perrysburg's Solar Fields bought by German concern".The Blade. Retrieved19 June 2019.
  5. ^"Calyxo Increases CdTe Production To Be Number One".Solar Power + Management. 13 June 2012. Retrieved19 June 2019.
  6. ^Lannin, Patrick (30 April 2008)."Orkla ends REC put option deal with Q-Cells".Reuters. Archived fromthe original on 21 June 2019. Retrieved19 June 2019.
  7. ^Bjartners, Anders (29 April 2009)."Q-Cells moves to sell $860m stake in Norway's REC".ReCharge. Retrieved21 June 2019.
  8. ^Stromsta, Karl (29 April 2009)."Q-Cells and Sunfilm join forces to form thin-film titan".ReCharge. Retrieved21 June 2019.
  9. ^"Q-Cells takes over Solibro GmbH".Renewable Energy Focus. 10 July 2009. Retrieved19 June 2019.
  10. ^Steitz, Christoph (5 June 2012)."Hanergy to acquire Q-Cells's Solibro unit".Reuters. Retrieved19 June 2019.
  11. ^Cho Mu-hyun (27 August 2012)."Hanwha acquires German solar-cell maker Q-Cells".The Korea Times. Retrieved19 June 2019.
  12. ^"Solarfun Changing Name To Hanwha SolarOne".Energy Matters. 22 December 2010. Retrieved19 June 2019.
  13. ^abKim, Miyoung; Sarawagi, Vinay (3 August 2010)."Hanwha Chem to buy 50 pct of Solarfun for $370 mln".Reuters. Retrieved19 June 2019.
  14. ^"Major solar panel plant opens in US amid backdrop of industry worries about low-priced Asian imports".AP News. 18 October 2023. Retrieved17 April 2024.
  15. ^Dulaney, Chelsey (8 December 2014)."Hanwha Group to Consolidate Solar Holdings".The Wall Street Journal. Retrieved19 June 2019.
  16. ^Kim Bo-gyung (31 October 2018)."Hanwha Q Cells Korea seeks to remain top solar cell maker".The Korea Herald. Retrieved19 June 2019.
  17. ^Patrini, Michael (29 January 2019)."Hanwha Q CELLS Co., Ltd.'s $825 Million Merger agreement with Hanwha Solar Holdings Co., Ltd. – Global Legal Chronicle". Retrieved22 December 2020.
  18. ^Lee, Yoojung (24 June 2020)."Harvard Grad's Nikola Bet Bolsters Dynasty Built on Dynamite".Bloomberg News.
  19. ^"Qcells Invests $2.5 Billion in U.S. Solar Supply Chain - Qcells North America".us.qcells.com. 11 January 2023. Retrieved1 April 2024.
  20. ^Drew Kann (8 August 2024)."$1.45B federal loan helps power up new-age solar plant north of Atlanta". The Atlanta Journal Constitution.
  21. ^"DOE finalizes $1.45 billion loan guarantee for Qcells' Georgia solar plant".pv magazine USA. 20 December 2024. Retrieved22 December 2024.
  22. ^Metea, Rachel (20 December 2024)."DOE finalizes $1.45 billion loan guarantee for Qcells' Georgia solar plant". Retrieved22 December 2024.
  23. ^"DOC Issues".Morgan Lewis.
  24. ^"Department of Commerce Issues Final Determination of Circumvention Inquiries of Solar Cells and Modules from China".US Department of Commerce.
  25. ^Prasso, Sheridan."Solar Firm Gets Millions in US Tax Credits Despite Chinese Labor Questions".Bloomberg.
  26. ^Will, Norman (22 April 2025)."US DOC issues steep AD/CVD tariffs on Southeast Asian solar cells".PV TECH.
  27. ^Nils O., Kjerstad (24 April 2025)."RECOMMENDED VOLUNTARY CASH OFFER TO ACQUIRE ALL SHARES IN REC SILICON".REC Silicon. Retrieved24 April 2025.
  28. ^Nils O., Kjerstad (18 July 2025)."Announces the Close of a USD 6.5 million Short Term Loan with Hanwha International LLC".REC silicon. Retrieved18 July 2025.

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