US Solar Manufacturing Wins Cash From DOE and VCs

Suniva, Solaria, SolarWorld, PPG and Abengoa awarded a total of $13 million, while 1366 Technologies adds some VC

The Department of Energy and a few contrarian venture investors continue to support manufacturing and commercializing solar power products in the U.S.

Building standard commodity-grade silicon solar panels in the U.S. is a difficult goal to support -- so investors and the Department of Energy are looking to fund innovative technologies and business plans that don't expose American companies to the competition of commodity solar production in China.

As part of the DOE's SunShot Initiative’s aim to achieve cost-competitive solar energy by 2020, the agency is providing $13 million to these firms to support manufacturing innovation:

The DOE also discerningly cited SEIA-GTM Research market data stating that the U.S. installed 930 megawatts of PV in Q3 of this year, up 20 percent over Q2, making it the second-largest quarter U.S. PV history.

That's why it would seem to be a good time to invest in solar technology. Pricing has stabilized, though the market is still growing and still volatile.

1366 Technologies just won $2.5 million from return investor Vorndran Mannheims Capital (formerly Ventizz Capital Partners), capping its C round at $17.5 million and bringing its total VC raised to $64.5 million. 1366 is in the kerfless silicon sector.