Greentech Lead America: First Solar has acquired Solar Chile, a Santiago-based solar development company in which FundaciĆ³n Chile was an early investor.
Under the terms of the agreement, the five-person Solar Chile team is joining First Solar, and FundaciĆ³n Chile will provide ongoing consultation services. Terms of the transaction were not disclosed.
Solar Chile has a portfolio of early- to mid-stage utility-scale photovoltaic (PV) power projects totaling about 1.5 gigawatts (GW) in Regions I, II, III, and XV in northern Chile, including the Atacama Desert region, which offers the highest solar irradiance in the world.
āWe have been very impressed by the quality of the Solar Chile team and the projects they are developing, and we believe that together we will bring even more value to the Chilean market,ā said Jim Hughes, First Solar CEO.
āCombining Solar Chileās market knowledge and promising project portfolio with First Solarās resources, technology and strong execution track record offers Chile a rapid and proven path to add significant solar generation capacity, helping to meet high energy demand and support economic growth.ā
āFirst Solarās acquisition of Solar Chile is a milestone of enormous significance to our country,ā said Alvaro Fischer, president of FundaciĆ³n Chile. āIt highlights the tremendous potential that solar PV energy has to change the demography and the economy of northern Chile, opening it up to new opportunities beyond mining and fishing, into water desalinization, hydrogen production or large green data centers.ā
āChile faces a growing energy demand from its sustained economic growth,ā said HernĆ”n Cheyre, executive vice-president of CORFO, the Chilean governmentās economic development agency. āThe growth of the solar industry and the arrival of First Solar validates ChileĀ“s position as a regional hub for entrepreneurship and innovation.ā
First Solar has a global development pipeline of projects under contract to utilities totaling 3 GW, with 2 GW under construction. It has constructed more than 600 megawatts of PV power projects worldwide.