July-August 2009

Providing a Financial Boost and Water Conservation

The recession has hit every state hard. But the recession, and the damage it has done to the workforce, has seriously ravaged the state of Michigan.

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Photo: HDA Architects of Chesterfield, MO

By Dan Rafter

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But once the backwashing process is complete, it’s easy to see again that the glass is either green, brown or grey, depending on the type of bottle from which it came, Ruder says.

Building Up a Struggling Economy
Sitton points to the Fabiano Brothers distribution center as the type of business that can help the state of Michigan escape its economic doldrums. The center, thanks in large part to its innovative water reclamation system and other green features, incorporates new technology.

By building smart and efficiently, Sitton says, companies already doing business in the communities surrounding Bay City—known collectively as the Great Lakes Bay Region—are providing a boost now to the state’s economy.

The building activity, especially when the Fabiano distribution facility is factored into the mix, is already impressive in this area.

Hemlock Semiconductor, located in the bay region community of Hemlock, MI, has made Michigan the world’s leading exporter of high purity polycrystalline silicon for the semiconductor and solar industries. The company is now expanding its existing facility in the Hemlock, a move that will boost its annual capacity to 19,000 metric tons by 2009. Hemlock Semiconductor has also announced plans to build a monosilane production facility co-located inside their existing operations. Monosilane is the essential raw material needed for the production of thin film silicon photovoltaic modules.

United Solar Ovonics, a thin-film manufacturer, is creating new jobs at its six new plants in Greenville, MI. United Solar has made headlines by making the solar panels that will soon be installed in the world’s largest rooftop solar power system, a system that will be operating at a General Motors assembly line in Spain.

Then there’s Evergreen Solar, a Massachusetts-based company that has decided to invest more than $55 million into a new production plant in Midland, MI, the heart of the Great Lakes Bay area.

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Evergreen Solar manufactures string ribbon wafers that are used in the production of solar panels using a proprietary wafer technology.

“I think we’re all happy with the activity in this area right now,” says Sitton. “The new Fabiano Brothers facility is a big positive to the region, too. It’s a gorgeous facility. If you see it from the highway, it just looks stunning. The economy in Michigan is not very good right now. This area is just about the only place in the state of Michigan that seems to have a fairly strong economy.”

Author's Bio: Dan Rafter is a technical writer in Illinois.

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