A trader-led structural model...

In South-East Europe, gas–power interaction has moved decisively beyond simple fuel substitution logic....

Liquidity, LNG volatility, basis...

South-East Europe’s gas markets have quietly crossed a structural threshold. What once functioned...

Rising U.S. LNG dependence...

The European Union’s growing dependence on U.S. LNG is often framed as a...

European gas prices at...

European gas prices have fallen to their lowest levels in more than a...
Supported byClarion Energy
HomeUncategorizedGreece: Brite Solar...

Greece: Brite Solar to complete agrisolar panel factory by end-2024

Greek startup Brite Solar is building a production line in Patras for transparent solar panels for agrivoltaic production. It completed a series A financing round earlier this year.

Thessaloniki is becoming a hub for innovative solar power solutions, with Organic Electronic Technologies (OET) and Brite Solar both developing transparent agrivoltaic panels. The latter is building a factory in the Industrial Area of Patras which it expects to complete by the end of the year.

Founded in 2017, the startup makes nanomaterial coatings for glass to save energy for buildings or contribute to electricity production, primarily above crops, on canopies or greenhouses. The aim is to achieve a balance for sharing solar radiation between energy production and crop cultivation in such a way that none is sacrificed in favor of the other, according to Brite Solar. It means that its agrisolar panels have weaker performances than conventional modules.

The company adjusts the coating to the plant’s needs and the location. It currently sources its solar panels sources from China and India.

Brite Solar is building a production facility in Patras with an annual capacity of 150 MW in peak terms. It aims to then boost it to 300 MW.

In a series A financing round earlier this year, the company secured EUR 8.6 million. Greece-based New Energy Capital (NEC) led the venture capital investment. The European Innovation Council (EIC), which approved funding earlier to Brite Solar, participated with Brace 4 Impact and Deep Capital Group. NEC is managed by New Energy Partners (NEP), Balkan Green Energy News reported.

Supported byOwner's Engineer banner

Recent News

Supported byspot_img
Supported byspot_img

Latest News

Supported byspot_img
Supported bySEE Energy News

Related News

CEE–SEE cross-border capacity auction reversals and what traders should readfrom them

Recent reversals in cross-border capacity auction prices between Central and Southeast Europe have drawn close attention from market participants. Annual and monthly auction outcomes on corridors linking Hungary, Romania, Bulgaria, Greece, Croatia, and Serbia are no longer moving in...

Qair Montenegro plans 60 MW Jabuka solar power plant as part of regional expansion

Qair Montenegro is preparing to develop a new solar power plant in the municipality of Niksic, with a planned installed capacity of 60 MW. The Montenegrin Government has granted the investor the necessary urban and technical conditions to move...

Serbia 2030: A manufacturing hub powered by wind, solar and engineering talent — or an energy-expensive periphery?

By 2030, Serbia will be defined by the decisions it makes today about electricity, industrial policy and renewable energy. Two futures exist in parallel. In the first, Serbia becomes the leading nearshore manufacturing hub for Central and Western Europe,...
Supported byVirtu Energy
error: Content is protected !!