Published on 4 Oct 2012
Foxconn Technology Group and GCL-Poly Energy Holdings Ltd. will build and jointly operate a solar- power plant in China's Shanxi province.
The companies will share revenue from selling electricity to the government utility at the 310-megawatt plant which will use GCL's solar cells to be assembled by Foxconn, Shu Hua, executive president of Hong Kong-listed GCL said.
Total budget for the plant, in Shanxi's Datong region, was initially based on a cost of 10 yuan ($1.58) per watt, which has since dropped to about 9 yuan, Shu said. The venture helps Foxconn founder Terry Gou move toward his goal of boosting investment in alternative energy, and GCL-Poly secures a customer amid declining prices and its first loss since 2009.
The plant will be in Datong, about 200 kilometers from Taiyuan, where Foxconn operates a factory, Shu said.
GCL-Poly secured approval from China's National Energy Administration to start work on 340 megawatts of solar projects in the northern province of Shanxi, it said in August.
Those projects include 310 megawatts of ground-mounted solar farms and 30 megawatts of roof-top installations in Datong, it said at the time, without disclosing financial terms.
ENF Profiles For Companies Mentioned in This Article
PV industry news is republished free of charge, please send your news to