• On The Insider: Britney's Bikini-Clad Top 10
March 14, 2008 4:23 AM PDT

Rumor: Nanosolar worth $2 billion, Solyndra $1 billion

by Michael Kanellos
  • Font size
  • Print
  • Post a comment

CIGS looks like it could pay off.

Nanosolar and Solyndra, which both develop copper-indium-gallium-selenide (CIGS) solar cells, are looking at raising additional funds, according to sources, and both companies have put large valuations on themselves.

According to sources, Nanosolar is telling investors it will have a valuation, after another round of funds, of around $2 billion. Solyndra says it is worth $1 billion. Not bad for companies with combined current revenues at the moment that probably would have difficulty rivaling the take of a reasonably located convenience store. Nanosolar just started shipping a few solar cells to customers at the end of 2007, and Solyndra is ramping up toward production.

I haven't confirmed these rumors, and they might be wrong, but they have been consistent.

Nanosolar CEO Martin Roscheisen has said that Nanosolar does not have a term sheet, a document that provides details about business prospects and a funding proposal, at the moment. Roscheisen, however, has not discussed valuation.

Both Nanosolar and Solyndra were contacted for official comment, but no response has yet been received. Companies generally don't comment this early on financial issues such as valuation.

The high valuations seem to be driven by the current dynamics of the solar business. Demand continues to outstrip supply. The shortage of silicon continues to hamper manufacturers of silicon solar panels. CIGS solar panels aren't as efficient for converting sunlight into electricity as silicon panels, but advocates say they will cost less. The active materials in CIGS panels also aren't in dire supply at the moment either.

The love affair that investors have had with First Solar, which makes thin film solar panels with cadmium telluride, also persists, which lends some glow to CIGS companies. First Solar went public at $20 per share in late 2006 and now trades at $207. (Before the recent swoon on Wall Street, it hit $283.) First Solar has also seen tremendous growth in revenue and earnings with each passing quarter.

When it went public, First Solar was valued at close to $2 billion. It currently is valued at $16.3 billion. Some believe the company is overvalued, but those are the numbers.

First Solar, however, was not your ordinary start-up. The company's founders started tinkering with cadmium telluride technology in the 1980s. By the time the company went public, First Solar had already begun mass production.

Recent posts from Green Tech
eMonitor home energy tracker drills deep
Toyota, Nissan to standardize electric car rechargers
Selling a car the iPod way
'Runaway' Prius: Questions raised about driver
'Deep-energy retrofits' take root in homes
Lithium or hydrogen bike? Choose your steed
Sen. Reid helps win wind turbine plant for Nevada
Italy green-lights largest PV solar plant in Europe
advertisement
CNET River
  • image
  • image
    raygun01: I just celebrated @anyclip 's entire catalog at the #gdgtaustin party.
    by Jason Howell
  • image
    mollywood: Just discovered that society isn't ready for cross-platform Bumping (Droid to iPhone). (Via@mikegermano)
    by Molly Wood
  • image
  • image
    jdolcourt: If you revel in rants, now's your chance to contribute to @cnet's Jasmine France's new column on Tech Dos & Don'ts: http://bit.ly/blvAku
    by Jessica Dolcourt
advertisement

Tech finds its place at SXSWi

roundup As the Web generation descends on the South by Southwest Interactive show in Austin, several location-based start-ups try to put themselves on the map.

Top 10 must-have gadgets

This month's picks include the Nexus One and the Squeezebox Radio. See what else is hot on our most recent Must-Have Gadgets list.

About Green Tech

Innovation in energy and environmental technologies is long overdue, in business and at home. Green-tech reporter Martin LaMonica and other CNET writers serve up fresh clean-tech news and commentary.

Add this feed to your online news reader

Green Tech topics

advertisement
advertisement

Inside CNET News

Scroll Left Scroll Right