BP Solar recently announced that it is going to shut down its Maryland manufacturing facility in a move to lower costs. According to a release from BP Solar, "The company has ceased silicon casting, wafering, and cell manufacturing at its Frederick, Maryland facility. Approximately 320 great paying positions will be eliminated out of 430 positions at the Frederick location. BP Solar will maintain its U.S. presence in sales and marketing, research and technology, project development, as well as key business support activities."
To that I ask, what about building stuff in the USA? Are we that cost noncompetitive as a country that we can't keep the jobs here vs. China?
"This was a difficult decision and we deeply regret the impact it will have on our employees and the community. We have a long history in Frederick and I am thankful for the support of all our colleagues, the community and local, state and federal officials," said Reyad Fezzani, CEO of BP Solar.
All laid off employees will only get full pay and benefits for three months with a severance package, job placement assistance, and transitional resources.
"Solar prices declined between 40 and 50% since the onset of the financial and economic crisis, compressing industry margins and driving solar power towards grid competitive pricing," Fezzani said. "By shifting our supply to a high quality, low cost supply base to serve both distribution customers and large scale projects, we have strengthened our position as a provider of competitive solar solutions with our offer of the highest lifetime value."
http://www.thedailygreen.com/environmental-news/latest/bp-solar-jobs-460710">BP solar
Actually the "grid parity" claim is rather like the, um, "Beyond Petroleum" claim.
According to SolarBuzz the price of residential electricity as of last month,
http://www.solarbuzz.com/SolarPrices.htm">34.64 cents per kwh was about 3 times larger than
http://www.eia.doe.gov/cneaf/electricity/epm/table5_3.html">average grid prices in the United States
Now that BP can gain
nothing from its Amory Lovins inspired "environmental" oil company, claim, ("Beyond Petroleum") the solar business, which was all about marketing and nothing about
energy has lost its usefulness.