Intersolar Sparks Solar News

Sun Well Solar, Sopogy, Day4Energy, Ausra and Florida Power & Light make news at the inaugural Intersolar conference in the United States.

More than 12,000 visitors and 210 exhibitors have registered for Intersolar’s inaugural North America show, said Ericka Weber, director of the Fraunhofer Institute for Solar Energy Systems and chairman of the conference, at the opening session Tuesday.

The conference is a sign that Intersolar, which also runs the largest solar conference in Europe, sees the United States as another potentially huge market for the industry.

“At the end of the day [solar] will be the least expensive energy technology of all, including oil, gas, coal and nuclear power,” he said. “So this is the future we have in front of us. We hope to help to ignite this type of solar revolution, which we have experienced in Germany over the last five years. I see no reason [for this not to happen] in the United States too and why not let it happen here in California?”

Intersolar hopes to help California become the first to adopt a strong feed-in-tariff modeled after the German system, he told Greentech Media last week.

After all, Germany’s feed-in tariff, which pays a set price — for solar power, has helped the cloudy, rainy country become the world’s largest solar market. California is even better suited to solar energy, he said.

The same day as the conference officially kicked off, one European company, SolarWorld, announced it is ready to expand in the United States.

SolarWorld, based in Bonn, Germany, said it has completed a new production line in Camarillo, Calif.

The line has the capacity to produce up to 100 megawatts of monocrystalline solar panels, which CEO Frank Asbeck said would help SolarWorld meet “the booming demand” in the U.S. market, according to the announcement.

The company also announced it has entered the North American Solar Challenge, a race of solar-powered cars from Texas to Calgary, Canada, this month.

In other evidence of European-North American crossover, Marlboro, Mass.-based Evergreen Solar (NSDQ: ESLR) inked its largest deal so far, a contract to sell $1.2 billion worth of cells to German-based IBC Solar through 2013.

Meanwhile, solar-energy company Clear Skies Solar, based in Long Island, N.Y., said Tuesday it will open its first office in Europe, in Larissa, Greece. Due to government tax incentives passed in 2006, Greece has become a leading market for solar power, the company said.

Here is some other solar news on Tuesday:

-- Reporter Rachel Barron contributed to this story.