meyer burger plant closure

Less than a year after Meyer Burger‘s shiny new solar panel factory opened in Goodyear, Arizona, the whole operation is shutting down. The Swiss company is pulling the plug on what was supposed to be a crown jewel of American solar manufacturing, leaving 283 workers scrambling for new jobs.

So much for the grand promises. Back in 2021, Meyer Burger painted a rosy picture of Arizona’s solar future. The Goodyear plant would produce 1.4 gigawatts of panels annually, maybe even expand to 1.5 gigawatts. They had a fat contract with DESRI for up to 5 gigawatts over five years. Everything looked golden.

Grand promises of 1.4 gigawatts annually and fat contracts with DESRI painted Arizona’s golden solar future.

The factory opened in June 2024, riding high on the Inflation Reduction Act wave. It was one of more than 100 solar and storage facilities announced after the IRA passed, part of $38.3 billion in solar manufacturing investments nationwide. Politicians loved talking about localizing clean energy supply chains and creating good-paying American jobs.

Reality hit fast. Asian imports kept flooding the market with dirt-cheap panels. DESRI canceled that big contract. Meyer Burger couldn’t secure financing to keep the lights on. They even scrapped plans for a second facility in Colorado. Turns out making solar panels in Germany is more economical than in the supposed solar manufacturing hub of Arizona. The company still runs a solar cell production site in Thalheim, Germany, despite reducing shift times for workers there earlier this year.

The layoffs are permanent, according to the WARN letter filed with state officials. Production leads, material handlers, quality supervisors – all gone. These weren’t just numbers on a spreadsheet. They were people who bought into the promise of sustainable, high-tech manufacturing jobs in their community.

Meyer Burger’s parent company is busy negotiating with bondholders and hunting for bridge financing. The company delayed its annual report release from April 15 to May 31, 2025, citing its precarious financial position. Nobody knows what happens to the Goodyear facility now. Maybe it becomes a warehouse. Maybe it sits empty.

The whole mess exposes an uncomfortable truth about American solar manufacturing. Federal incentives can spark investment announcements and ribbon-cutting ceremonies, but they can’t magically make U.S. factories competitive with overseas operations. This closure comes despite the remarkable US solar capacity growth to 220 GW by the end of 2024. The solar dream crashed in Arizona, and hundreds of workers are paying the price.

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