2018年3月31日 星期六

1366tech,247solar,甘肃电投扬州日新应天科技有限公司

Solar at a cost  less than coal  1366科技有限公司取得了硅片制造技术革命性的突破。与传统的硅片制造工艺相比,其研发的“直接法硅片”技术可以降低50%的制造成本,以及60%的能源消耗。轉載自: http://1366tech.com

247Solar Plants operate around the clock regardless of weather by storing daytime solar energy as low-cost heat, instead of as electricity in high-cost batteries. 轉載自:   http://www.247solar.com   


        













甘肃电投扬州日新应天科技有限公司 轉載自: www.b2b98.net/qiye/shengshi/gansu/1150.htm
英文名称:Yang Zhou Sunrise YT Technology Co.,Ltd.of GEPIC
中文地址:扬州市开发西路15号
邮政编码:225009
英文地址:15# Kaifa West Road, Yang Zhou City, JiangSu Province, P.R.China
经营代码:3200686555093
组织代码:686555093
电子邮箱:hadejun[at]163.com
联系电话:0514-82986337
经营性质:国有企业
法人代表:乔爱工   
  
甘肃电投扬州日新应天科技有限公司
甘肃 2013-09-23
轉載自:http://talent.sciencenet.cn/index.php?s=/Info/index/id/9132

 
甘肃电投扬州日新应天科技有限公司成立于2009年3月,是以陈应天教授的专利技术为核心,按照《中华人民共和国公司法》和现代企业制度要求组建的高新技术企业,由甘肃电投日新应天科技有限公司控股,首次注册资本3000万元,经营范围是利用太阳能提纯硅材料,开发、制造和销售高效光电池,并进行太阳能利用的工程咨询及技术指导。公司位于扬州市开发西路15号。法人营业执照注册号321091000032374。

公司技术总监陈应天教授(剑桥大学博士),曾多年任教于剑桥大学、加州理工大学,有着在国外十几年的太阳能研究经验,在国际权威刊物上发表论文三十余篇,发明专利十几项。其提出的新的无光象主动光学聚光与跟踪理论,已在实验中得到验证,受到了国际学术界的广泛承认与关注。以陈应天教授为核心的技术研发和企业管理团队都具有博士学位或高级职称,他们依据陈应天教授的理论和技术发明进行创新工作,已完成了均匀性数倍聚光光伏电池发电机、新型太阳炉、新型光热利用系统、太阳炉炼硅系统等系列产品,在国际太阳能利用的领域中创立了一整套新的技术,由此所发展的新工艺已成为完整的太阳能利用产业链的重要依托。


公司采用具有革命性的多晶硅生产新方法,生产太阳能级硅材料和高效太阳能光伏电池片。首期生产能力为100吨,光电池生产线为25兆瓦。在此基础上,二期将进一步扩大生产能力,进行太阳能开发利用及光伏新技术研发和应用产品的制造和销售。

联系人:怡晓玲(女士)
联系电话:+86 (0)13893686439
联系地点:北京市海淀区中关村东大街89号恒兴大厦15层C座
E-mail:yzrxyt@163.com
注:请应聘者投递简历,简历格式:姓名-学校-专业-应聘职位,注明招聘信息来自科学网。
  

孫正義:軟銀將在沙特創建全球最大太陽能發電項目

孫正義:軟銀將在沙特創建全球最大太陽能發電項目

  
2018年03月28日    
轉載自:   http://finance.sina.com/bg/tech/sinacn/20180328/02031729164.html


Saudis, SoftBank Plan World's Largest Solar Project

載自: https://www.bloomberg.com/news/articles/2018-03-28/saudi-arabia-softbank-ink-deal-on-200-billion-solar-project








  • Venture may cost $200 billion, add 100,000 jobs in the kingdom
  • Plan envisions 200GW of solar capacity in Saudi Arabia by 2030       Saudi Arabia and SoftBank Group Corp. signed a memorandum of understanding to build a $200 billion solar power development that’s exponentially larger than any other project.
    SoftBank founder Masayoshi Son, known for backing ambitious endeavors with flair, unveiled the project Tuesday in New York at a ceremony with Saudi Crown Prince Mohammed Bin Salman. The powerful heir to the throne of the world’s largest crude exporter is seeking to diversify the economy and wean off a dependence on oil.
    Masayoshi Son and Mohammed bin Salman.
    Photographer: Jeenah Moon/Bloomberg
    The deal is the latest in a number of eye-popping announcements from Saudi Arabia promising to scale up its access to renewables. While the kingdom has for years sought to get a foothold in clean energy, it’s was only in 2017 that ministers moved forward with the first projects, collecting bids for a 300-megawatt plant in October.
    At 200 gigawatts, the Softbank project planned for the Saudi desert would be about 100 times larger than the next biggest proposed development and more than double what the global photovoltaic industry supplied last year, according to data compiled by Bloomberg New Energy Finance.
    “It’s a huge step in human history,” Prince Mohammed said. “It’s bold, risky and we hope we succeed doing that.”

    Over The Top

    SoftBank-Saudi solar vision dwarfs other planned PV projects  

    If built, the development would almost triple Saudi Arabia’s electricity generation capacity, which stood at 77 gigawatts in 2016, according to BNEF data. About two thirds of that is generated by natural gas, with the rest coming from oil. Only small-scale solar projects working there now.
    Son said he envisions the project, which runs the gamut from power generation to panel and equipment manufacturing, will create as many as 100,000 jobs and shave $40 billion off power costs. The development will reach its maximum capacity by 2030 and may cost close to $1 billion a gigawatt, he said.
    “The kingdom has great sunshine, great size of available land and great engineers, great labor, but most importantly, the best and greatest vision,” Son told reporters at a briefing.

    Deepening Ties

    The agreement deepens SoftBank’s ties with the Saudi Arabia, and advances the crown prince’s ambition to diversify its economy.
    “SoftBank seeks investment and Saudi needs energy, so it may make sense to sort the financing out in a large block and then separately hammer out the phases and the technical details,” said Jenny Chase, head of solar analysis at BNEF. “It is worth noting that many of these memorandums of understanding do not result in anything happening. ”
    SoftBank was said to be planning to invest as much as $25 billion in Saudi Arabia over the next three to four years. That’s a boost for Prince Mohammed, who’s been at the forefront of the Vision 2030 campaign to diversify the kingdom’s economy away from oil by that year. SoftBank is said to have aimed to deploy as much as $15 billion in a new city called Neom, which the crown prince plans to build on the Red Sea coast.
    The Japanese company’s Vision Fund is also said to plan investments of as much as $10 billion in state-controlled Saudi Electricity Co. as part of efforts to diversify the utility into renewables and solar energy.

    Vision, Investments

    Son, who is known as a savvy investor with a flair for the spotlight, has been promoting clean energy since the 2011 Fukushima nuclear disaster and recently completed a 50-megawatt wind power farm in Mongolia. He has also pushed a plan dubbed “Asia Super Grid,” a plan to connect Asian nations by grids and undersea cables to distribute clean energy.
    The kingdom’s deal-making has quickened as it pursues Prince Mohammed’s diversification goals. Saudi Arabia’s sovereign wealth fund, the Public Investment Fund, which has more than $224 billion in assets, spent about $54 billion on investments last year. The sale of about a 5 percent stake in oil giant Saudi Arabian Oil Co. is expected to provide more funds.
    Saudi Arabia also plans to build at least 16 nuclear reactors over the next 25 years at a cost of more than $80 billion. Electricity demand in the country has risen by as much as 9 percent a year since 2000, according to BNEF.

    — With assistance by Chisaki Watanabe, and Stephen Stapczynski
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