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AstroPower files for bankruptcy

  • Thread starter Bill Kaszeta / Photovoltaic Resources
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Bill Kaszeta / Photovoltaic Resources

AstroPower files for bankruptcy

General Electric bids $15 million for Glasgow-based (Delaware)
solar-power company

By STEVEN CHURCH
Staff reporter, The NewsJournal
02/03/2004

AstroPower Inc. has filed for bankruptcy as part of an offer by
General Electric Co. to buy most of the company's assets for $15 million.

The solar-power pioneer filed for Chapter 11 bankruptcy protection
late Sunday, listing debts at $143.5 million and assets at $205 million.
The court action sets up a bidding process that will result in a new
owner by the end of April. Although GE already has made an offer,
any company or individual can submit a bid. If no one exceeds
GE's offer, AstroPower's assets will go to that company. The
bidding will be overseen by the bankruptcy court in Wilmington.

Chief executive Carl H. Young III said a sale of most of the company's
U.S. assets should allow AstroPower to continue operating. "We're
getting so close to good things," he said Monday.

The bankruptcy filing and pending sale follows a year of bad news,
as the Glasgow-based company fell from its place as one of the
most admired technology companies in Delaware. After it failed
to file several financial reports required by the federal government
last year, AstroPower saw its stock price fall to less than $1 from
a high of more than $40 a share in 2000. The company also lost
about half its work force through layoffs and attrition. It now
employs about 350 people in Delaware.

AstroPower's new owner would decide whether to continue
building solar-electric panels, the company's main products,
in Delaware, or move production out of state.

GE spokesman Dennis Murphy declined to say what GE's plans
would be for AstroPower, but he said GE believes the company
would be a good addition. GE has been looking to invest in solar
power as part of its strategy to compete in the renewable energy
market. GE bought Enron Corp.'s wind-energy division after that
company declared bankruptcy.

Officials with Gov. Ruth Ann Minner's administration have met with
GE and two other companies that have expressed interest in buying
AstroPower, said Judy McKinney-Cherry, director of the Delaware
Economic Development Office. The companies did not make
any promises, but they gave the impression they would keep
manufacturing operations in Delaware, she said.

Whichever company winds up buying AstroPower, the state will
put together a package of incentives aimed at keeping those
jobs in Delaware, McKinney-Cherry said. She declined to say
how much money the state might be prepared to offer.

AstroPower founder Allen Barnett said a GE takeover would be
good news for the employees at AstroPower's main plant in
Glasgow. AstroPower has too many valuable assets, from its
new production equipment to its skilled workers, for GE to start
up production someplace else, said Barnett, who left the company
last year but remains one of its biggest shareholders.

GE does not currently have any solar-power production capability,
Murphy said.

Stock analyst Eric Prouty said GE's interest is an important vote
of confidence in AstroPower and the rest of the solar-power industry.
"Those guys are pretty serious about renewable-energy
technologies," said Prouty of Adams, Harkness & Hill Inc. in Boston.

GE Energy, the GE subsidiary that has bid on AstroPower, bills
itself as one of the world's leading suppliers of power-generation
technology, with 2003 revenues of nearly $18.5 billion. And Enron's
wind-energy division has been steadily bringing in strong revenue
for the company, Prouty said.

Other companies are likely to enter the bidding for AstroPower,
Prouty said, even though the company has failed to release any
financial data to investors for more than a year.

Employees are more likely than stockholders to benefit from the
transaction, Prouty said. The company, in its statement, said that
if the sale goes through as proposed, "it is unlikely that there will
be any return to the company's shareholders."

AstroPower disclosed its financial problems last year, after
company officers failed to file financial reports required by the
U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission. The company was
delisted from the Nasdaq Stock Market in late May, and its stock
price tumbled. On Monday, it lost more than 90 percent of its value
to close at 10 cents a share.

In September, the board of directors hired an investment banking
firm from Philadelphia to help it either sell the company or find a
new group of investors. Since then the company has been talking
to potential suitors, Young said.

In October, AstroPower moved out of its executive office building
and turned it over to its landlord.

Bill Kaszeta
Photovoltaic Resources Int'l
Tempe Arizona USA
[email protected]
 
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Ben Simons

Am Thu, 05 Feb 2004 13:28:39 GMT hat Martin Riddle
Funny, just read the article in Solar Today.

Its more of pricing pressure from cheap foriegn manufactures.

Where are they cheaper? I thought US prices are lower than others.
 
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