(Warum sollte Rinck in den kommenden Tagen für "neues Feuer sorgen" und das gerade an einem wichtigen tag wie heute unterlassen? Fakt ist einfach, daß die Zukunftsausichten eher vage behandelt wurden. )
stimmt garnicht, Rinck hat ausdrücklich auf neue kommende Aufträge hingewiesen
und hier habe ich im WO etwas sehr Interessantes gelesen:
aus:
www.wallstreet-online.de/diskussion/...hoert-top-favoriten-tun
Zitat:
(Das koennte der Auftrag sein: VV Rinck sprach von grossen Kunden wie GE)
dazu fand ich das hier:
news.cnet.com/8301-11128_3-20120416-54/...factory-in-colorado/
GE to build thin-film solar factory in Colorado
General Electric plans to build the largest solar panel manufacturing plant in the U.S. which will produce 400 megawatts worth of thin-film panels aimed at utilities and commercial customers.
Martin LaMonica
by Martin LaMonica October 14, 2011 5:38 AM PDT
GE's thin-film solar technology has roots at the National Renewable Energy Laboratories and was developed by start-up PrimeStar which GE acquired.
GE's thin-film solar technology has roots at the National Renewable Energy Laboratories and was developed by start-up PrimeStar which GE acquired.
(Credit: GE)
General Electric announced yesterday it will spend $600 million to build a solar factory in Colorado, giving it the means to re-enter the solar business in force.
The company said the factory in Aurora will have the capacity to produce at an annual rate of 400 megawatts, or enough to power 80,000 U.S. homes. It will create 355 jobs in Colorado after completion and another 100 solar-related jobs at GE's research facility in upstate New York.
Production will start early next year of solar panels with cadmium telluride thin-film solar cells, the same thin-film material used by industry cost leader First Solar. Availability of panels will be in 2013.
GE intends to sell its panels to utility and commercial customers, where the company sees significant demand in the years ahead. Once completed, it will be the largest solar factory in the U.S.
The solar industry is in the midst of a brutal global price war which has led to the bankruptcy of four U.S.-based solar producers, including the high-profile collapse of government-backed Solyndra.
GE's product is designed to compete well on price by using low-cost thin-film materials which are relatively efficient at converting sunlight to electricity. The panels themselves are light and large which lowers the cost of related components, such as racking systems.
Related stories
• GE: Solar business is our 'next wind'
• GE re-enters solar business with thin-film system
• Solyndra's burnout burdens other solar upstarts
GE used to produce traditional panels with polycrystalline silicon solar cells which, with the onrush of Asian suppliers over the past few years, have become a commodity product. But in 2009, the company said it intends to re-enter the solar business, calling it GE's "next wind," with a new thin-film product aimed at utilities and commercial rooftops.
Earlier this year, it completed the acquisition of Colorado-based start-up PrimeStar Solar, which created the manufacturing process behind GE's current panels.
In a statement, GE said that locating its manufacturing plant near its existing pilot line and research facility in Colorado will allow it to enter the market faster than anticipated.
Vic Abate, the vice president of GE's renewable energy business, said the company was also aided by state and federal government officials involved in selecting a location for the factory and adding research jobs in New York.
Ich denke, das wäre doch wirklich phänomenal, wenn GE wirklich der Kunde ist, oder? Darüber müßte man mal mit Krause reden.
was meint ihr?
"Mit Speck fängt man Mäuse, mit Versprechungenen Aktionäre" (Börsenweisheit)