Evergreen Solar Inc., one of Massachusetts' rising green energy stars, is on its way to becoming one of the state's top producers of hazardous waste.
The company generated more than a million pounds of hazardous waste last year, according to a report filed this week with the state Department of Environmental Protection, even though its new $450 million factory in Devens wasn't operating at full capacity.
"It's the other side of this whole clean energy push," said Liz Harriman, deputy director of the Massachusetts Toxics Use Reduction Institute at the University of Massachusetts at Lowell.
"Even so-called clean manufacturing uses a lot of nasty chemicals," she said.
Marlboro-based Evergreen Solar is one of 540 Massachusetts businesses that must report toxic chemical usage each year, as part of the state's Toxics Use Reduction Act.
The company's report for 2008 shows that it created nitric acid, sulfuric acid, hydrogen fluoride, and sodium hydroxide. Some of it was treated at Devens, while the restwas disposed of off-site.
An Evergreen executive told neighbors this week that the plant is operating at 40 percent capacity.
When the company's Devens plant is running at full capacity and making some 780,000 solar panels a year, sources say it could be among the state's top three creators of hazardous waste...
...EVERGREEN SOLAR 2008 TOTAL OUTPUT:
** Nitric Acid: 50,450 punds
** Sulfuric Acid: 785,782 pounds
** Hydrogen Fluoride: 54,486 pounds
** Sodium Hydroxide: 252,944 pounds
Evergreen's stock prices have fell from more than $17.50/share in December of 2007 to less than 0.67 cents today on falling revenue owing to falling prices.
They have a notice from NASDAQ giving them 180 days to raise their price above $1.00 or be delisted.
Apparently they've learned what other dirty industries learned: Export waste dumping:
In 2009, Evergreen started closing down domestic module production and auctioning off equipment. That same year, faced with a now non-competitive cost-structure, the firm began moving module manufacturing to a Chinese contract manufacturer.
http://seekingalpha.com/article/214105-rise-and-fall-of-evergreen-solar">Rise and Fall of Evergreen Solar
According to the EIA, solar PV electricity produced (lumped with tidal and wave energy), worldwide in 2007, less than, 0.049 quads (approximately 0.052 exajoules) of the 500 exajoules of energy produced world wide, about as much as a 600 MW gas plant would produce if operated continuously at 100% of capacity utilization.
http://tonto.eia.doe.gov/cfapps/ipdbproject/iedindex3.cfm?tid=2&pid=36&aid=12&cid=&syid=2004&eyid=2008&unit=QBTU">EIA Data Table Access Page