NYTimes | A Silicon Valley maker of solar power arrays that was started with high hopes and $527 million in loans from the federal government said on Wednesday that it would cease operations. The failure of the company — and the loss to taxpayers — is likely to renew the debate in Washington about the wisdom of clean energy subsidies and loan guarantees.
President Obama praised the company, Solyndra, for its advanced technology during a visit last year. But in a statement on Wednesday, Solyndra said its business had run into trouble because of difficult global business conditions, including slowing demand for solar panels, and stiff competition.
The Energy Department, which approved the funding, said China’s subsidies to its solar industry were threatening the ability of Solyndra and other American manufacturers to compete. The price of a solar array, measured by cost per watt of capacity, has fallen 42 percent since December 2010, the agency said.
Two other American solar companies, Evergreen Solar and SpectraWatt, also sought bankruptcy protection in August, and both said competition from Chinese companies had contributed to their financial problems.
In the case of Solyndra, some experts said that regardless of the competition, the company’s unique designs, which were expensive to manufacture, were to blame for its failure.
Solyndra was promised loans of up to $535 million under a guarantee program authorized by Congress as part of the 2009 stimulus package. The Energy Department has made more than 40 promises of guarantees, of which Solyndra was the first. It has committed $18 billion in guarantees and expects to allocate several billion dollars more by the time the program finishes at the end of September. Fist tap brotherbrown.
President Obama praised the company, Solyndra, for its advanced technology during a visit last year. But in a statement on Wednesday, Solyndra said its business had run into trouble because of difficult global business conditions, including slowing demand for solar panels, and stiff competition.
The Energy Department, which approved the funding, said China’s subsidies to its solar industry were threatening the ability of Solyndra and other American manufacturers to compete. The price of a solar array, measured by cost per watt of capacity, has fallen 42 percent since December 2010, the agency said.
Two other American solar companies, Evergreen Solar and SpectraWatt, also sought bankruptcy protection in August, and both said competition from Chinese companies had contributed to their financial problems.
In the case of Solyndra, some experts said that regardless of the competition, the company’s unique designs, which were expensive to manufacture, were to blame for its failure.
Solyndra was promised loans of up to $535 million under a guarantee program authorized by Congress as part of the 2009 stimulus package. The Energy Department has made more than 40 promises of guarantees, of which Solyndra was the first. It has committed $18 billion in guarantees and expects to allocate several billion dollars more by the time the program finishes at the end of September. Fist tap brotherbrown.
7 comments:
Well Cnu add this:
http://www.theatlantic.com/business/archive/2011/09/the-freelance-surge-is-the-industrial-revolution-of-our-time/244229/
The Freelance Surge Is the Industrial Revolution of Our Time
The new craft skill folks, and this was a warning long ago
http://www.theglobalist.com/StoryId.aspx?StoryId=9313
He commented at the Aspen Ideas Festival in June of this year that the way in which the U.S. university system is organized, and the cost trends it has generated, is currently reminiscent of "a bubble economy, but one bordering on outright social insanity."
On top of that, the price of gasoline has risen a dime a day since Wednesday.
http://www.gasbuddy.com/gb_retail_price_chart.aspx?time=24
So the question is, when will the majority realize that the US is a wholly-owned subsidiary of China?
What do u think about this guy Doc
http://edge.org/conversation/the-local-global-flip
douchebag in need of a haircut and a shower...,
But it's not brotherbrown. Most of the U.S. nationalized debt is domestically owned.
Ha! Beat me to it. Though I would have said:
1) not quite the rock star he thinks he is
2) gets an honorable mention for Comic Book Guy impersonation
3) is suffering buyer's remorse when it comes to the whole 21st century Viridian techno-triumphalism theme he pushed some 20 years ago,
4) really should learn that very few people nowadays traffic in dweebspeak, time to unpostmodern that vocab,
5) diggin way, way, way too far into the Neolithic cheetoes and corn syrup diet fad, and so
6) wouldn't last first two minutes of my kettlebell workout, and you know what they say, healthy mind in a healthy body,
7) yeah, probably does have stinky hair.
Poor choice of words on my part; when will the majority realize that US spending habits and the desire to purchase "low-priced chinese goods" is a whirlpool that is taking our economy down the drain.
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