Hanwha Q Cells plant in Dalton, in the US state of Georgia (Courtesy of Hanwha Q Cells) Hanwha Solutions Corp., the energy unit of South Korea’s chemicals-to-financial conglomerate Hanwha Group, will likely withdraw from the polysilicon production business in the US by pulling the plug on the last polysilicon plant in the US, run by Norwegian firm REC Silicon ASA.
According to sources on Friday, REC Silicon, in which Hanwha Solutions and its affiliate have the biggest 33% stake, recently suspended operation of its polysilicon-production plant in Moses Lake, Washington, and is expected to cut the plant’s employees and eventually shutter the facilities.
It was REC Silicon’s last polysilicon-manufacturing plant in the US after the company shut down its electronic-grade polysilicon-manufacturing plant in Butte, Montana, last year.
The factory operation halt comes after REC Silicon failed to pass Hanwha Q Cells Co.’s final quality test of its solar-grade polysilicon, a move expected to lead to termination of a 4 trillion won ($2.7 billion) deal signed in 2023 to supply REC Silicon’s polysilicon to Hanwha Q Cells, the solar power unit of Hanwha Solutions known as Qcells in overseas markets.
Polycrystalline silicon, also called polysilicon or poly-Si, is a raw material used by the solar photovoltaic and electronics industry REC Silicon’s polysilicon plant closure would also thwart Hanwha Group’s ambitious plan to build a complete photovoltaic (PV) manufacturing value chain in the US, spanning polysilicon, ingot, wafer, cell and module production.
Polysilicon or polycrystalline silicon is a raw material used by the solar PV and electronics industry.
(Graphics by Sunny Park) With the two factories, Hanwha became the first company to offer production lines for the four major phases of the solar value chain in North America, boasting the capacity to generate 8.4 GW of electricity from sunlight as of 2024.
Built in 2014, its solar-grade polysilicon-manufacturing facility in Moses Lake, Washington, can produce 16,000 tons a year, enough to build 8 GW of PV modules.
But seasoned employees and engineers left REC Silicon during the temporary closure before Hanwha’s acquisition and after the permanent shutdown of the factory in Butte, hampering the development of high-grade, highly purified solar-grade polysilicon that meets Hanwha Q Cells’ standards, said an industry source.
Hanwha Q Cells' production complex in Cartersville, Georgia (Courtesy of Hanwha Q Cells) The equipment and machines were also old and worn, costing too much to replace, said an official from Hanwha Q Cells.
The Korean company is even mulling the sale of its stake in REC Silicon, added the official.
Following the closure of REC Silicon’s polysilicon-manufacturing facilities, Hanwha Q Cells plans to use polysilicon provided by OCIM Sdn. (OCIM), a Malaysian polysilicon-manufacturing unit of Korean solar cell major OCI Holdings Co.
OCIM’s polysilicon sells for $22 per kilogram, three times as much as Chinese polysilicon.
But considering that the US may impose up to 250% anti-dumping duties on China-made polysilicon, Hanwha could obtain polysilicon from OCIM at lower cost.
Write to Hyeon-woo Oh at ohw@hankyung.com Sookyung Seo edited this article.
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