---
title: "Advanced production capacity landing in the United States, CSI Solar accelerates transformation to \"North American manufacturing\""
type: "News"
locale: "en"
url: "https://longbridge.com/en/news/286736954.md"
description: "CSI Solar is accelerating its transformation to North American manufacturing, planning to start commercial production at its new factory in Indiana within two months, primarily producing high-efficiency solar cells. The company's gross margin leads its peers, and the new CEO Colin Parkin will drive this transformation. The Jeffersonville factory is expected to have a total capacity of 6.3 GWp, and despite external concerns about China's technology exports, CSI Solar has stated that it has not encountered challenges"
datetime: "2026-05-18T08:15:52.000Z"
locales:
  - [zh-CN](https://longbridge.com/zh-CN/news/286736954.md)
  - [en](https://longbridge.com/en/news/286736954.md)
  - [zh-HK](https://longbridge.com/zh-HK/news/286736954.md)
---

# Advanced production capacity landing in the United States, CSI Solar accelerates transformation to "North American manufacturing"

_The company is continuously shifting its manufacturing focus to the United States, including the upcoming launch of a large new factory in Indiana for the production of advanced solar cells._

#### **Key Points:**

-   CSI Solar will start commercial production at a large solar cell factory in the U.S. within the next two months, as part of its ongoing efforts to advance its manufacturing presence in North America.
-   Benefiting from a high-profit market layout and maintaining a high profit margin in its energy storage business, the company's gross margin significantly outperforms most of its peers.

Yang Ge

Is it a Chinese company, a Canadian company, or an American company?

This is the biggest question currently surrounding the solar panel manufacturer **CSI Solar** (CSIQ.US). The company likes to emphasize its Canadian background, stating that it was established in Ontario in 2001. However, due to the background of its founder, Qiu Xiaohua, and the company's long-standing reliance on China as its primary manufacturing base, it has been viewed as a Chinese company for many years.

Now, CSI Solar is trying to convince the market, especially U.S. President Trump, that it is a North American company and that its focus is gradually shifting to the United States. In the latest **quarterly report** released last Thursday, CSI Solar announced that Qiu Xiaohua has stepped down from his long-held position as CEO, with senior executive Colin Parkin taking over. Based on his background, the latter appears to have Canadian roots.

At the same time, the company also detailed its expansion plans for the new high-tech production base located in Jeffersonville, Indiana. This factory is expected to grow rapidly in the future, producing half or more of the company's solar products. This factory focuses on solar cell production, which is the core component of solar panels, thus differing from many recent factories established by Chinese companies in the U.S. Most other factories primarily produce solar modules with lower technical barriers, while the related solar cells still rely heavily on imports from China.

CSI Solar stated that the Jeffersonville factory entered the trial production phase earlier this year and is expected to officially commence production in about two months. The first phase of the project has a capacity of 2.1 GWp, with the second phase expected to add 4.2 GWp of capacity by 2027, bringing the total capacity to 6.3 GWp.

It is worth noting that some in the solar and investment community are concerned that China may block the export of advanced technologies, such as the equipment needed for the Jeffersonville factory. However, Qiu Xiaohua stated, "We have not yet seen challenges in this regard," and added that he hopes Trump's meeting with Chinese President Xi Jinping in Beijing last week will help ease this aspect of the tense trade relations between China and the U.S.

In the public statements following the meeting, neither side mentioned the issue of China's export restrictions. Western media generally believe that the meeting's significance is more symbolic than substantive. In recent years, the U.S. has repeatedly restricted the export of high-end chips and chip manufacturing equipment to China, while China has retaliated by limiting the export of rare earths; these rare earths are widely used in the manufacture of special magnets required for many advanced electronic products.

In addition to the new factory in Jeffersonville, CSI Solar is also operating an earlier, lower-technology factory in Mesquite, Texas, primarily responsible for assembling solar modules. This factory currently has an annual module production capacity of 5 GWp, and the company expects to double it to 10 GWp by the end of this year Qu Xiaohua emphasized during the earnings conference call that 45% of the 2.5 GW solar module shipments in the first quarter of this year were produced in North America, and all products sold in North America come from the Mesquite factory. With the new factory in Jeffersonville coming online, it is expected that the solar cells used in its American-made solar panels will also be fully produced locally, rather than just the final modules being assembled in Mesquite.

#### **Subsidy Eligibility**

If Canadian Solar can successfully position itself as a true North American company, it will help gain an advantage in the increasingly complex U.S. solar subsidy eligibility issues. This topic became a market focus last week when Reuters reported that many solar installers in the U.S. have stopped sourcing solar panels from domestic manufacturers linked to China due to concerns that the Trump administration may revoke U.S. subsidy eligibility for products associated with China. As we previously pointed out, these manufacturers related to JinkoSolar (JKS.US; 688223.SH) and LONGi Green Energy (601012.SH) mostly only produce solar modules in the U.S., while the solar cells used are still primarily sourced from their factories in China.

The Reuters report did not explicitly state whether the solar panels produced by Canadian Solar in the U.S. meet U.S. subsidy eligibility. However, it mentioned that Canadian Solar has recently been removed from the approved supplier list of major U.S. solar installer Sunrun (RUN.US). Canadian Solar did not mention this matter during the earnings conference call, and analysts did not raise related questions, which seems to reflect the company's belief that its increasingly U.S.-centric manufacturing layout will help reduce related risks.

Canadian Solar's increasingly U.S.-centric strategy is also part of the company's broader strategy in recent years, focusing on the most profitable markets while reducing or exiting less profitable ones. We have previously mentioned that nearly half of the company's revenue comes from the U.S., which has helped it maintain leading industry profit margins despite severe overcapacity in the global solar industry.

Canadian Solar's gross margin last year was 18.3%, and the company stated that it expects the gross margin for the remainder of this year to remain in the range of 13% to 15%. In contrast, JinkoSolar's gross margin last year was only 2.2%, while LONGi Green Energy's was just 0.8%. Some of the difference also comes from Canadian Solar's operations beyond solar panels, including solar power plant construction and emerging energy storage businesses.

Canadian Solar's financial performance in the first quarter was not particularly impressive, with revenue declining 10% year-on-year to $1.1 billion. Parkin described that the market continues to face various "challenges." The company's solar module shipments fell 64% year-on-year during the period, but part of the decline was offset by strong growth in the energy storage business, which saw shipments increase 142% year-on-year to 2.1 GWh.

In terms of profitability, Canadian Solar recorded a net loss of $32 million in the first quarter, roughly similar to the $34 million loss in the same period last year.

The company's stock price has fluctuated significantly over the past year. Between September and November last year, the market was once optimistic about an industry recovery, driving the stock price to more than double within three months, but it later proved that the expectations were overly optimistic Before the latest earnings announcement, the company's stock price had fallen by 11%; however, the stock price remained roughly flat the day after the announcement, indicating that investors had originally hoped for more positive news in the report.

Looking ahead, much will depend on whether CSI Solar can successfully persuade solar panel buyers and investors that it is gradually reducing its ties with China and transforming into a North American company. If it can achieve this, it may help improve the valuation performance of its publicly listed stock in the United States; currently, its price-to-sales ratio (P/S ratio) remains relatively low compared to most of its peers

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