Hanwha Q Cells’ solar module installed at a garage in North Carolina (Courtesy of Hanwha Q Cells) Hanwha Q Cells Co., a solar power unit of South Korea’s chemicals-to-defense conglomerate Hanwha Group, brought forward operations of a US plant to take advantage of Washington’s move to regulate the products of Chinese rivals.
The subsidiary of Hanwha Solutions Corp., however, suspended production at a South Korean solar panel factory on weaker demand, industry sources said on Friday.
The company decided to stop operations at its facility producing 2.9 GW of solar modules a year in Eumseong, about 100 kilometers (62 miles) south of Seoul. It already lowered the utilization rates of another factory in Jincheon, about 18 km away from the Eumseong factory, which manufactures 2.9 GW of modules and 5 GW of solar cells.
“We will suspend the Eumseong plant, but we have yet to decide on a detailed schedule such as when to stop and resume operations,” said a company source.
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