CleanTechnica
intl_tech
D1
Texas Scores A $357 Million Solar Factory As The War On Solar Flops
发布:2026-06-09
· 事件:2026-06-09
June 9, 2026 2 hours Tina Casey 0 Comments Support CleanTechnica's work through a Substack subscription or on Stripe . US President Donald Trump swept back into office last year on a mission to cut re...
June 9, 2026
2 hours
Tina Casey
0 Comments
Support CleanTechnica's work through
a Substack subscription
or
on Stripe
.
US President Donald Trump swept back into office last year on a mission to cut renewable energy out of the nation’s power generation profile. So much for that. Defeat is already staring him in the eye. The double whammy of solar power plus storage keeps on beating fossil fuels by a wide margin, and new solar factories keep sprouting up like mushrooms after the rain. The latest development in factory news is particularly interesting because it represents the transition to more efficient, next-generation solar cell technology.
An Industry In Transition
Until recently, the global solar industry was dominated by conventional PERC (passive emitter rear contact) solar cells. Other forms have shown early promise of superior performance, but PERC solar cells were more economical to fabricate as the mass market took shape. They quickly outran the competition, with durability being among the advantages.
Now that the industry is shifting gears into higher-performing systems, Texas is front and center. The state is already one of the
solar manufacturing hotspots
in the US, and the Japanese firm TOYO Solar is among those growing its business there. The company specializes in HJT solar cells, which deploy three layers of material operating in tandem.
HJT solar cells are among the next-generation technologies that researchers have been eyeing for decades. Initial efforts began in the 1970’s (
here’s
one example) and began to gather steam in the 1980’s, but that was right around the time PERC began to emerge, and HJT was among those to fall by the wayside as the market revved up in the 21st century.
Now the worm has turned, and TOYO is among the HJT stakeholders speeding towards production. The company got a head start in the US market last fall, when its first 1-gigawatt solar module manufacturing facility in Houston reached trial production phase. Earlier this year TOYO also announced a supply agreement with a US-based polysilicon manufacturer to be named later. “The supply of polysilicon from the Supplier underpins TOYO’s ongoing investment in U.S. manufacturing capacity, aligning with its mission to be a leading solar supplier in the U.S. market,” TOYO emphasized.
Yet Another Solar Factory For Texas, And The US
Yesterday TOYO made mores news with the unveiling of plans for a $357 million, 1.5-gigawatt solar cell
manufacturing facility
to complement its module factory.
“By co-locating the 1.5 GW cell line with its module operations, TOYO expects to achieve operational synergies, reduce localized logistics costs, and shorten the production cycle from raw wafer processing to finished, U.S.-made solar modules,” TOYO explained.
“The facility will produce next-generation HJT [heterojunction] cells, utilizing a technology that delivers enhanced conversion efficiencies and temperature coefficients compared to legacy solar architectures,” the company confirmed.
If you caught that thing about temperature, that’s a key development in solar technology. Conventional solar cells perform best in cooler temperatures, giving HJT the advantage in hot climates. TOYO also addressed the durability issue in yesterday’s announcement, asserting that its technology combines “industry-leading conversion efficiencies with very low annual degradation rates.”
As described by TOYO, the initial phase of the project is already well under way. If all goes according to plan, the new facility will be ready to commence pilot-scale production within 20 months.
“The new cell plant reflects TOYO’s long-term strategy to build a fully FEOC-compliant domestic manufacturing platform focused on serving the needs of the U.S. utility-scale solar market,” added TOYO CSO Rhone Resch in a press statement, with FEOC referring to the latest rules for domestic content.
“By producing premium solar products in the United States, we will be well positioned to meet the market’s evolving domestic content requirements while strengthening supply chain security and reliability,” Resch affirmed.
Fossil Fuels Down, Solar Power Up
The TOYO announcement comes at a time when the US solar industry continues to fire on all cylinders, despite facing stiff political headwinds at the federal level and among some states, too. With an assist from new energy storage systems, utility-scale solar has consistently outrun fossil energy systems for
new power generation capacity additions
in recent years, with 2025 marking the fifth year straight. The small-scale solar sector has also become a significant generation asset, currently reaching a cumulative total of
58 gigawatts
.
The reasons are simple. Solar power is the more economical choice, and solar power plants have a relatively fast construction timeline. The closest competitor is natural gas, which continues to be hampered by
a turbine backlog
globally and in the US. In April, the firm Wood Mackenzie took note of the gap b