July 4, 2011
Labor accounts for just 3 to 4 percent of the cost of making solar panels. Other factors, such as materials and the cost of equipment, are more significant. And as a result of increased automation over the last few years, labor costs are going down. According to Wenham, in 2008 Suntech needed four workers for each megawatt of production capacity. Last year, it only took 1.49 workers to make the same amount. "Why would Suntech be doing this if their key advantage were low labor costs?" Wenham asks. U.S. energy secretary Steven Chu came to share Wenham's view last year, after he visited Suntech's main plant. "It's a high-tech, automated factory. It's not succeeding because of cheap labor," he said.
Wenham says the top Chinese companies have been particularly good at identifying promising technologies—often concepts and prototypes that have been languishing in labs for decades—and finding ways to produce them at a large scale. For most of the last two decades, the solar cells that set world records for efficiency were made by researchers at the University of New South Wales in Australia. "They were trying to commercialize [that technology] the entire time," he says. "It took Suntech to turn those laboratory processes into production processes."
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