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SEG Solar has invested $60 million in a new solar module factory in Houston, Texas.
SEG Solar has opened a new PV module manufacturing facility in Houston, Texas. The automated factory line has an initial capacity of 2 GW of n-type panels per year, with plans to expand to 5 GW by 2030.
“We have invested $60 million right here in Houston,” said Jun Zhuge, SEG Solar’s chief operating officer, addressing an audience of mostly customers, partners and local officials gathered for the opening. “We’re not just talk.”
The fully automated production line – SEG Solar claims that it’s the longest PV line in the world – takes in glass and cells and runs through production stages over conveyor belts all the way through framing and packaging. There are numerous stations for various inspection and quality assurance processes. The hands-off line requires 12 technicians to attend the machinery, although more were on hand for training purposes.
“We don’t just want to make money,” Zhuge said. “We want to build solar manufacturing in this country. We want to bring all of the supply chain to this country.”
The company, co-founded by Zhuge and CEO Jim Wood, was launched in California in 2016. Through 2021, the company established cell and module factories in Southeast Asia and China. The PV cells that feed the Houston operation are sourced from Indonesia, but the company says it is committed to producing cells in the United States.
Wood, a veteran of investment banking and solar installation businesses, eventually went to work for a large Chinese solar manufacturer. He teamed up with Zhuge and other partners with industry experience, and they decided there was a real opportunity to establish a successful American module producer under the right circumstances.
“We looked at a lot of the lessons that we’ve learned from myself and other folks here working at other manufacturers and we said, we’re going to lean heavily into automation,” Wood told pv magazine USA, adding that the production machines are the largest of their types available. “Those stringers are 1.3 times faster than any other stringers in the world. So because we’re fully automated, because the capacity of those lines are larger, because the machines run faster, we’re able to be as competitive here as we would be in Southeast Asia.”
According to Wood, the company looked at other regions to establish its US manufacturing base, but decided that Houston offered a number of key advantages for its strategic development plans. He cited Houston as having one of the best ports in the country, a large and educated labor force, and a friendly business atmosphere. Moreover, Texas is already the second-largest solar market in the United States, with 42 GW installed as of the second quarter of 2024, according to the Solar Energy Industries Association (SEIA), and is poised to become No. 1 next year.
Wood said that SEG Solar’s purpose is not to satisfy domestic content requirements or circumvent tariffs. It is a 100% US-owned company, with the principals assuming financial as well as managerial responsibility for its operations.
“SEG is financed internally,” he said. “We don’t have private equity. There are no external owners. We haven’t taken any outside debt. We’re a true American company where we’ve taken our profits, recycled them and grown this business organically.” |