For solar module manufacturers in India, the cell is the single most important input — both in terms of cost (cells represent 55–65% of module CAPEX) and performance (cell efficiency and quality determine the module’s power output and long-term reliability).
Choosing the wrong cell supplier — one with inconsistent quality, ALMM compliance gaps, or unreliable supply — can cascade into module yield issues, DISCOM compliance failures, warranty claims, and customer relationship damage.
This guide gives Indian module manufacturers and large EPCs a structured framework for evaluating and selecting a solar cell supplier.
Unlike commodity procurement decisions that can be reversed relatively easily, solar cell sourcing involves:
Long qualification cycles: Module manufacturers must test cells from a new supplier through their entire lamination and testing process, then validate the finished modules through flash testing and often accelerated ageing. This process takes 2–4 months minimum.
ALMM and certification implications: Your module’s ALMM listing and BIS certification are tied to specific cell specifications. Changing cell suppliers may require re-certification of your module — a 3–6 month process.
Customer commitments: If you have committed to deliver ALMM-listed, DCR-compliant modules to a customer and your cell supplier has a compliance gap, you face either contract default or emergency re-sourcing — both costly.
25-year warranty exposure: Module manufacturers carry 25-year performance warranties. Using cells from a supplier with questionable quality systems creates long-tail warranty liability that materialises years after the transaction.
Getting cell sourcing right is a strategic decision, not just a procurement exercise.
As of June 2026, all solar cells used in modules for government-funded projects, PM Surya Ghar installations, and net metering applications must be from an ALMM List-II approved manufacturer.
For module manufacturers, this is the first filter: your cell supplier must be on the ALMM List-II. No exceptions for government-linked markets.
Verification steps:
Websol Energy System’s M10 Bifacial Mono-PERC solar cells are manufactured at the Falta SEZ facility and are ALMM List-II approved — meeting the compliance baseline for all Indian government-linked module supply chains.
The advertised efficiency of a solar cell is its nominal value — typically the average of a production run. What matters for module manufacturers is the efficiency distribution and bin structure:
For Mono PERC cells in 2026, leading Indian manufacturers produce cells in the 22.0–23.0% efficiency range. Verify actual flash test data distributions — not just nominal claims — when qualifying a new supplier.
Current performance (Isc), which determines how cells are matched within modules, is equally important as efficiency. Cells with mismatched Isc in the same string reduce module output through current mismatch losses. Quality suppliers provide cells sorted by both efficiency and Isc.
Certification to ISO 9001 is a baseline indicator of systematic quality management — not a guarantee of product quality, but evidence that documented processes exist.
More specifically for solar cells, look for:
Incoming material control: Does the supplier test incoming silicon wafers, chemicals, and silver paste against specifications before use? Cell quality begins with input quality — suppliers who accept any material to keep their line running transfer quality risk to buyers.
In-process statistical process control (SPC): Critical process steps — PECVD deposition, diffusion, screen printing — must be monitored in real time with defined control limits. Ask for SPC data from recent production runs.
Outgoing quality systems: Every cell should be flash-tested. But what happens to cells that are borderline — close to the lower efficiency cutoff? Do they get mixed into higher bins, or are they correctly sorted and priced? The integrity of a supplier’s binning and testing process is where quality reputations are made or broken.
Defect rate transparency: Micro-cracks, edge chips, solder joint defects — what is the supplier’s incoming defect rate, and do they disclose it? Suppliers who hide defect data in incoming quality negotiations are exposing you to module-level quality issues.
At Websol’s Falta SEZ manufacturing facility, quality control is embedded from incoming wafer inspection through to final cell testing — with all cells flash-tested and binned before shipment.
A cell supplier who cannot reliably supply the volume you need, on the schedule you need, is not a viable partner — regardless of product quality.
Capacity verification: What is the supplier’s nameplate cell production capacity? What percentage of that is already committed? Request a capacity allocation breakdown to understand how much headroom exists for your volumes.
Wafer supply security: Indian cell manufacturers source polysilicon and wafers largely from China and a few other global suppliers. How does your potential supplier manage wafer supply risk? Do they have multi-source wafer procurement, or are they dependent on a single supplier?
Lead times and minimum order quantities (MOQ): For smaller module manufacturers, large MOQs and long lead times create working capital and planning challenges. Understand the supplier’s MOQ structure and typical lead time from order to delivery.
Track record: How long has the supplier been operating? A cell manufacturer with 5 years of operation has a very different supply reliability track record than one with 30 years. Websol’s 30+ year continuous operating history at Falta SEZ is a differentiated reliability signal in a market where many manufacturers are recent entrants.
Cell manufacturers who provide thorough technical documentation and responsive support make module manufacturers’ lives significantly easier.
What to look for:
The solar cell manufacturing process involves dozens of process steps — and module manufacturers benefit from suppliers who understand the downstream implications of upstream process variations.
A 25-year module warranty is only as good as the supply chain behind it. If your cell supplier exits the market in year 5, your warranty claims and re-procurement become significantly more complicated.
For Indian module manufacturers sourcing cells from domestic suppliers, the supplier’s financial health is a material consideration:
Financial stability in a capital-intensive manufacturing business like solar cells requires continuous reinvestment in equipment, maintenance, and process improvement. Suppliers who underspend on CAPEX to maximise short-term cash flow tend to see quality and yield deterioration over time.
Websol Energy System combines the attributes that module manufacturers should look for in a cell supplier:
For module manufacturers evaluating cell sourcing, or for large EPCs seeking to understand their module supplier’s cell procurement practices, contact Websol’s team for sample availability, technical datasheets, and supply capacity discussions.
Technically possible but not recommended. Cells from different production lines have different I-V characteristics — mixing them in the same module creates current mismatch that reduces output. For quality modules, use cells from the same manufacturer and ideally the same production batch.
Websol currently manufactures M10 (182mm) Bifacial Mono-PERC solar cells — the format that dominates global module production lines and is compatible with virtually all current tabbing, stringing, and lamination equipment.
For specific MOQ, lead time, and pricing information, contact Websol’s supply team directly. Requirements vary based on order volume, frequency, and cell specification.
Websol’s technical team can provide sample cells for your in-house qualification testing, along with detailed process parameters, flash test data, and application engineering support. Qualification typically involves lamination testing, flash test validation, and electrical performance verification.
Cell warranty terms are discussed as part of supply agreements. For specific warranty coverage and terms, contact Websol.
Yes. M10 cells are compatible with laser cutting for half-cut module designs. Half-cut Mono PERC modules reduce resistive losses and improve shading tolerance — an increasingly standard design choice for quality module assembly.
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