Energy & Environment

China's Suntech lands major solar deals

July 14, 2009

Suntech Power Holdings, China’s largest solar company, said on Monday it had reached agreements to develop four solar power plants on the mainland, Reuters reported. The New York-listed firm said it had struck 1.8 gigawatts of solar power deals with the governments of Shaanxi and Qinghai provinces and the city governments of Shizuishan and Panzhihua. The firm said that the projects will still require permits from the National Development and Reform Commission as well as investment and project financing. Analysts said the preliminary deals underscore the firm’s ability to snare a “meaningful share” in the Chinese solar market. Suntech’s New York shares rose by 4% to close at US$14.92 on the news. The company's shares have risen by 27% this year.

Write a letter to the editor about this article(please reference article title in the headline)

Discuss this article on China Economic Review's LinkedIn group (you must be a LinkedIn member to participate)

Related Articles:

(2010-07-28)

China's air pollution worsens for first time in five years

(2010-07-27)

Dalian oil spill cleanup finished

(2010-07-21)

China tries to keep oil spill out of international waters

(2010-07-20)

IEA: China now world's largest energy consumer

(2010-07-20)

ABB completes UHV power line to Shanghai

(2010-07-19)

CNPC tries to minimize oil spill impact

(2010-07-15)

China's power consumption growth slowed in June

(2010-07-13)

Zijin copper smelter leak forces closure

(2010-07-09)

State Grid to spend $0.9b connecting Tibet, Qinghai

(2010-07-08)

CNOOC in final talks with Tullow Oil on Uganda project

Advertisement