|
Posted Aug 7, 2024, 9:10 PM
|
Registered User
|
|
Join Date: Dec 2019
Location: Albuquerque, NM
Posts: 764
|
|
Another huge economic development announcement today in Albuquerque. Yet another solar-related company has plans for a $942 million, 834,000 sq ft manufacturing facility on Mesa del Sol. The project is slated to create over 900 new manufacturing jobs. Governor Michelle Lujan Grisham made the announcement today.
https://www.bizjournals.com/albuquer...ing-plant.html
Quote:
Another August, another big solar manufacturing announcement in New Mexico.
Ebon Solar LLC and Gov. Michelle Lujan Grisham said Wednesday Albuquerque will be the site of a new, $942 million manufacturing plant the Delaware-based company wants to build at Mesa del Sol — a sprawling master-planned development south of the Albuquerque International Sunport and east of Interstate 25.
The near-billion-dollar investment could create over 900 jobs, 90% of which could come from workers in New Mexico. Those jobs would staff an 834,000-square-foot plant at Mesa del Sol, which the company wants to use for "beginning-to-end advanced manufacturing of solar cells," according to a Monday news release.
Judy Cai, Ebon Solar's CEO, said "abundant" solar resources in New Mexico, alongside "favorable" renewable energy policies and a skilled workforce in the state, attracted the company.
"These factors enhance Ebon Solar's capital investment and production capabilities and make the City of Albuquerque, Bernalillo County, and the State of New Mexico ideal partners as we integrate into the clean energy market," Cai said in a statement.
The City of Albuquerque, Bernalillo County and the state of New Mexico have all promised money for Ebon's manufacturing development, pending approval and specific project milestones. Mark Roper, acting cabinet secretary for the New Mexico Economic Development Department, said $10 million in state and $1 million in City of Albuquerque Local Economic Development Act funds could go toward the project, with the City serving as the fiscal agent for those funds.
Roper added Ebon could qualify for Job Training Incentive Program support, too.
And, Bernalillo County received an Industrial Revenue Bond (IRB) application for Ebon's project, which will be introduced at the County Commission meeting on Aug. 13, Carolyn Tobias, economic development manager for the County, confirmed over email. Tobias didn't provide a dollar figure for that IRB request but noted in the email "an introduction summary will be part of the public agenda this weekend."
The company didn't provide a timeframe for when work on its Mesa del Sol manufacturing facility is expected to start and finish.
Ebon Solar is owned by Ebang International Holdings Inc. (NASDAQ: EBON), a global holdings company based in Singapore that specializes in application-specific integrated circuit, or ASIC, microchip and silicon manufacturing technology.
Ebon plans to produce solar cells in Albuquerque using a similar technological process, which it claims could help boost production and increase the energy efficiency of its solar cells. Ebon would look to sell those cells primarily to U.S.-based solar module manufacturers.
Solar module manufacturing has grown in the U.S., with 11 gigawatts of manufacturing capacity coming online in the first quarter of 2024 — an American record, according to a U.S. Solar Market Insight Q2 2024 report by the Solar Energy Industries Association and Wood Mackenzie, an energy data and analytics firm.
Cells, which rely on polysilicon for production, are one of the later stages in the module manufacturing process.
"We have succeeded in making New Mexico a global center for advanced energy manufacturing," Lujan Grisham said in a statement. "Ebon Solar joins other leading companies in embracing New Mexico's commitment to renewable energy."
Ebon Solar follows Maxeon at Mesa del Sol
Nearly one year ago, Maxeon Solar Technologies Ltd. (NASDAQ: MAXN) announced its own manufacturing plans at Mesa del Sol.
The Singapore-based company said last August it wants to build its first U.S. manufacturing site at the master-planned development, a planned investment of approximately $1 billion and over 1,700 jobs.
Maxeon would use its 125-acre site to make solar panels, the end stage of the solar production process that solar cells feed into. The two plants — Maxeon's solar panel manufacturing facility and Ebon Solar's 100-acre solar cell manufacturing facility — are located within the same industrial area at Mesa del Sol, a 500-acre "Sustainable Industrial Park."
Landing Maxeon at the park took around 60 days, Steve Chavez, managing partner of Mesa del Sol, told Albuquerque Business First last August.
Chavez said Wednesday the Ebon Solar deal wasn't much longer — closer to 90 days altogether, he estimated. And while Ebon's investment doesn't quite match Maxeon's billion-dollar plans, it followed a similar process, Chavez added.
A slew of different parties came together to pull Ebon to Albuquerque. Those include government partners like the City of Albuquerque and Bernalillo County and state agencies like the New Mexico Economic Development Department, Environment Department and Governor's Office, Chavez said.
Other parties played a part, too, he added. Those include the Public Service Co. of New Mexico and the Albuquerque-Bernalillo County Water Utility Authority for energy and water infrastructure buildout, respectively, and the Albuquerque Regional Economic Alliance and the New Mexico Partnership for recruitment help.
The New Mexico Partnership, the marketing arm of the state's Economic Development Department, specifically, has worked with Ebon since January of this year, according to Wednesday's news release.
"We really haven't had very many roadblocks," Chavez said. "Everyone's been working in unison, as a team, to attract these businesses."
Star Scientific Ltd., a hydrogen research and development company based outside Sydney, Australia, wants to put up its own $100 million campus within the Sustainable Industrial Park, too, alongside Ebon and Maxeon. Combined, those three developments total roughly 275 acres within the industrial park.
Maxeon's move last August spurred broader infrastructure buildout required to handle those, and other, industrial developments in the park, Chavez said.
"What we did was, when Maxeon decided to join Mesa del Sol, … we decided to create that park large enough to accommodate more industrial users," he said. "It was already in the plan to have a company like [Ebon Solar] come in.
"We already had everything in place — we had the numbers, we had the water, we had electric, we were ready to go," Chavez continued.
He added that infrastructure planning could lead to additional industrial developments within the Sustainable Industrial Park, too. About 100 acres remain available within the park, Chavez said, factoring in plans for a 40-acre water treatment facility at the park and the sites for Ebon, Maxeon and Star Scientific.
"We are bringing in more opportunities for our families in industries that will help us build a sustainable economy and a sustainable city," Albuquerque Mayor Tim Keller said in a statement. "This means more high-paying jobs for locals as Albuquerque continues to become a leader in clean energy."
|
|
|
|