AMSOLAR(wurde gerade von Payom übernommen) hat Projekte über 100 Mio US$ bis Ende 2011 in der Pipeline! Diese werden wohl über Wells Fargo bzw GCL Poly Energy, bzw einer Tochtergesellschaft, finanziert. Hört sich für mich gut an! Und auf der Seite von AMSOLAR ist auch von einer Kooperation mit GCL Poly Solar die Rede. Weinstein selber hat gute Kontakte nach China!
http://www.chinaknowledge.com/newswi...ws_Detail.aspx
GCL-Poly Energy nets Wells Fargo for PV projects in US
Nov. 11, 2010 (China Knowledge) - GCL-Poly Energy Holdings Ltd<3800> on Nov. 10 said it has signed a cooperative agreement with a U.S.-based bank, Wells Fargo & Co, to start
photovoltaic projects with installed capacity totaling 50 megawatts in the U.S. by the end of 2011.
Pursuant to the agreement, the Hong Kong-listed firm will acquire more than US$100 million of loans from the bank to launch several PV projects, which are principally for public facilities, through a subsidiary GCL Solar Energy.
In June, GCL-Poly Energy Holdings announced plans to spend US$50 million and US$5 million to build two solar power stations with totaled installed capacity of 9.7 MW in California.
At present, GCL-Poly Energy Holdings, a foreign-owned independent cogeneration plant operator in China, has a 20-MW PV station under operation in Xuzhou, Jiangsu Province with an electricity generating capacity of 24.76 gigawatt hours per year.
In addition, the PV firm aims to have an annual output
capacity of 21,000 tons of polycrystalline silicon and 3.5 GW of silicon chips by the end of this year.
Copyright © "2011"
www.chinaknowledge.com
Und jetzt noch einmal auf der Seite von AMSOLAR:
http://www.amsolarcorp.com/news/36-p...ar-on-schoolsq
San Diego Union-Tribune: "AMSOLAR & GCL to Develop $100,000,000 of Solar on Schools"
(San Diego Union-Tribune, June 24, 2010) - Solana Beach-based AMSOLAR said Thursday that it has landed financing for
20 megawatts of solar installations on school campuses, or about
$100 million.
AMSOLAR specializes in developing power-purchase agreements, in which it builds and operates solar systems on campuses, then sells the power to the schools at a discount from what a utility would charge.
The financing will come from GCL Solar Energy, a San Francisco subsidiary of GCL-Poly Energy Holdings, a Hong Kong-based maker of silicon chips used in solar panels.
The first project to be built under the financing is a 1.23-megawatt system at the University of San Diego, which is breaking ground this month.
http://www.signonsandiego.com/news/2...-starting-usd/