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China's top maker of solar water heaters wins 100-mln-dollar injection from foreign investors
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13:02, December 13, 2008

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Himin Solar Energy Group, China's top maker of solar water heaters, has secured an investment of nearly 100 million U.S. dollars from Goldman Sachs and CDH Investment, the English China Daily reported on Saturday.

The deal comes at a time when venture capital activities are slackening in the country as IPOs dry up, proving that investors remain zealous about China's promising solar industry.

The investment is expected to help Himin's expansion drive both at home and overseas. The company, based in east China's Shandong Province, produces solar water heaters that are sold both home and aboard.

Himin sells 2 million sq m of solar water heaters annually, which equals the total amount produced in the European Union and is twice that of North America.

The firm is now building the world's largest base of solar thermal utilization in Dezhou, Shandong. Himin's second production line of solar water heater tubes will start construction this month.

"We plan to double our investment in 2009 and expect sales to grow by 50 to 100 percent," Himin president Huang Ming said, adding the company is planning to expand the number of its distribution, service and training centers in major Chinese cities.

According to China's blueprint on renewable energies approved by the State Council, the country aims to raise the consumption rate of renewable energies from 7.5 percent in the total energy consumption in 2005 to 10 percent in 2010, when installed solar heaters will hit 150 million sq m.

The amount of money raised by Chinese companies in the first 11months of the year through IPOs fell 70 percent over last year to 21.8 billion U.S. dollars, according to Beijing-based market research house Zero2IPO.

After many offerings were trading below issue prices on the first day of their IPOs, Chinese regulators have slowed the pace of approving new IPOs since September. Many new IPOs have been opposed by investors over concern that oversupply could stifle activity.

That, coupled with stock investors' sagging interest, has curbed venture capitalists' activities as they are having difficulties in getting returns.

Himin is also a victim of the sagging stock market. The firm has been planning a domestic listing in September which has been forced to be delayed, a company source said.

Huang said his company is still pushing forward with the listing but declined to give a timetable.

Source:Xinhua



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