EPC companies occupy a unique position in the solar supply chain. Unlike project developers who can take a longer-term view on supplier relationships, EPCs are measured on project delivery — on schedule, on budget, and to the performance specifications that their developer clients have committed to lenders and offtakers. This creates a distinct set of requirements when evaluating upstream solar cell and module manufacturers.
The considerations that matter most to EPCs are not always the same as those prioritized in procurement discussions focused purely on component price. This guide maps out the evaluation criteria that experienced EPC organizations use when shortlisting and qualifying solar cell and module manufacturers.
The most expensive outcome for an EPC is a module delivery delay that pushes a project commissioning beyond a deadline tied to tariff eligibility, grid curtailment windows, or penalty provisions. A manufacturer’s track record on on-time delivery is therefore a primary evaluation criterion — and it is poorly correlated with the manufacturer’s headline capacity.
Large capacity does not guarantee reliable allocation. Manufacturers who are heavily over-subscribed may push smaller EPC buyers to the back of the queue during demand spikes. Understanding a manufacturer’s customer concentration — what percentage of their output is committed to long-term supply agreements with large buyers — gives insight into how much production flexibility they can offer to project-based buyers.
EPCs with recurring project pipelines are better positioned to negotiate allocation security through framework agreements that provide volume commitments in exchange for supply priority. For EPC companies without a predictable pipeline, qualifying multiple manufacturers reduces concentration risk.
Module datasheets present peak performance under Standard Test Conditions (STC) — 1000 W/m² irradiance, 25°C cell temperature, AM 1.5 spectrum. Field conditions in India, where ambient temperatures routinely reach 40–45°C and cell temperatures can exceed 70°C, are substantially different. The performance characteristics that matter for Indian installations include temperature coefficient (lower is better), low-light performance, and actual degradation rates rather than warranty coverage language.
Quality consistency across a production batch is a separate question from peak specification. EPCs installing modules at scale need to know that the power output distribution within a delivery lot falls within a tight range. High variance within a batch creates stringing and mismatch challenges that reduce system performance below modeled yield. Request flash test data distributions — not just nominal values — when evaluating module manufacturers.
For EPCs that source cells and operate their own or partner module production lines, the same principle applies at the cell level. Tight efficiency binning from manufacturers like Websol, which produces solar cells as a focused upstream operation, is a meaningful value driver for module production yields.
Lender technical advisors (LTAs) representing project finance institutions conduct their own assessments of module manufacturers during due diligence. A manufacturer that is not recognized as bankable by major LTAs — including firms like DNV, Black & Veatch, and Bureau Veritas — can create financing complications that delay financial close.
Beyond bankability classification, specific certifications matter. IEC 61215 (module design qualification), IEC 61730 (module safety), and PID resistance testing are baseline. For projects in coastal or high-humidity environments, IEC 61701 (salt mist corrosion) is relevant. Understanding which certifications a manufacturer holds — and ensuring they cover the specific product variant being procured, not just a different product family — is part of thorough qualification.
A module warranty is only as valuable as the manufacturer’s ability to honor it. EPCs evaluating manufacturers should assess the warranty terms specifically — not just headline warranty duration but the degradation guarantee structure (linear vs. step-down), the claim process, and the manufacturer’s financial standing relative to the warranty obligations they are underwriting.
Technical support during installation is separately important. Access to manufacturer engineers during commissioning, remote performance monitoring support, and clear escalation paths for technical issues are differentiators that are difficult to assess from procurement documents but highly relevant during project execution.
For EPC companies working on government-tendered projects in India — SECI, NTPC, state DISCOM tenders — procuring from ALMM-listed manufacturers is not optional. Verifying that the specific module model (not just the manufacturer) is listed on the current ALMM version before procurement locks in a specification is a practical step that avoids late-stage compliance complications.
The ALMM list is updated periodically, and models can be added or removed. EPCs managing multi-year procurement cycles should build ALMM verification into their procurement calendar rather than performing a one-time check at tender qualification.
EPCs specifying modules should understand the cell sourcing strategy of their module suppliers. Modules assembled from cells produced by a manufacturer with strong upstream control — where cell quality inputs, bifaciality factors, and efficiency distributions are tightly managed — offer more predictable and consistent module performance than those assembled from spot-market cell procurement.
India’s integrated solar cell and module manufacturing sector — where manufacturers produce both cells and finished modules under unified quality control — is growing. Engaging with manufacturers that offer this integration provides EPCs with supply chain transparency that is increasingly demanded by sophisticated project finance structures.
EPC companies that treat solar module procurement as a commodity buying exercise consistently encounter problems that project-focused procurement processes avoid. Quality consistency, supply reliability, bankability, and technical support are the criteria that determine whether a manufacturer is a genuine execution partner or simply a source of risk. India’s growing solar manufacturing ecosystem includes manufacturers that meet serious EPC qualification standards — identifying and building relationships with them is a competitive advantage in project delivery.
EPC companies design, procure, and construct solar power systems, managing the entire project lifecycle from engineering to installation.
Reliable manufacturers ensure timely delivery of solar modules and consistent product quality, which helps EPC contractors meet project deadlines.
EPC companies should verify certifications such as IEC standards, ISO quality systems, and ALMM approval.
Consistent module performance reduces mismatch losses and improves overall solar system efficiency.
Bankable manufacturers are trusted by lenders and investors, which helps solar projects secure financing.
Solar EPC stands for Engineering, Procurement, and Construction — the process of designing and building solar power plants.
Bankability refers to the financial credibility and reliability of a solar manufacturer from the perspective of investors and lenders.
We at Websol Energy System Limited respect the privacy of everyone who visits this website and are committed to maintain the privacy and security of the personal information of all visitors to this website.
Our policy on the collection and use of personal information and other information is outlined below.
In case of visiting this website to read or download information, it must be known that Websol Energy System Limited collects and stores a standard set of internet-related information, such as an Internet Protocol (IP) address, the date and time, the type of browser and operating system used, the pages(s) visited. All information is collected to help Websol Energy System Limited for making this site more useful to its customer(s) and only used for statistical purposes.
Websol Energy System Limited collects and uses information such as name, telephone number, email address, etc. in order to:
Except as set out in this privacy policy, Websol Energy System Limited will not disclose any personally identifiable information without permission, unless Websol Energy System Limited is legally entitled or required to do so or if Websol Energy System Limited believes that it is necessary to protect and/or defend it’s rights, property or personal safety etc.
Websol Energy System Limited reserves the full rights to change/alter/amend/modify the contents of the privacy policy from time to time without any prior notice or intimation.
VISITORS TO THIS WEB SITE ARE BOUND BY THE FOLLOWING TERMS AND CONDITIONS (“TERMS”). SO, PLEASE READ THE TERMS CAREFULLY BEFORE CONTINUING TO USE THIS SITE. IF YOU DO NOT AGREE WITH ANY OF THESE TERMS, PLEASE DO NOT USE THIS SITE.
Websol Energy System Limited retains copyright on all the text, contents, graphics and trademarks displayed on this site. All the text, graphics and trademarks displayed on this site are owned by Websol Energy System Limited.
The information on this site has been included in good faith and is for general purpose only and should not be relied upon for any specific purpose. The user shall not distribute text or graphics to others without the express written consent of Websol Energy System Limited. The user shall also not, without Websol Energy System Limited’s prior permission, copy and distribute this information on any other server, or modify or reuse text or graphics on this or any another system.
Although Websol Energy System Limited tries to ensure that all information and recommendations, whether in relation to the products, services, offerings or otherwise (hereinafter “information”), provided as part of this website is correct at the time of inclusion on the web site, Websol Energy System Limited does not guarantee the accuracy of the Information. Websol Energy System Limited makes no representations or warranties as to the completeness or accuracy of Information. Certain links in this site connect to other Web Sites maintained by third parties over whom Websol Energy System Limited has no control. Websol Energy System Limited makes no representations as to the accuracy or any other aspect of information contained in such other Web Sites.
Certain links in this site connect to other websites maintained by third parties over whom Websol Energy System Limited has no control. Websol Energy System Limited makes no representations as to the accuracy or any other aspect of information contained in such other websites.
Websol Energy System Limited hereby disclaims all warranties and conditions with regard to this information, including all implied warranties and conditions of merchantability, fitness for any particular purpose, title and non-infringement.
In no event will Websol Energy System Limited, agents or employees thereof be liable for any decision made by the user and/or site visitor for any inference or action taken in reliance on the information provided in this site or for any consequential, special or similar damages.
Applicable Law and Jurisdiction of this Disclaimer are governed by and to be interpreted in accordance with laws of India, without regard to the choice or conflicts of law provisions of any jurisdiction. The user/site visitor agrees that in the event of any dispute arising in relation to this Disclaimer or any dispute arising in relation to the website whether in contract or tort or otherwise, to submit to the jurisdiction of the courts located at Kolkata (West Bengal) (India) only for the resolution of all such disputes.
Except for the historical information herein, statements in this website, which include words or phrases such as “will”, “aim”, “will likely result”, “would”, “believe”, “may”, “expect”, “will continue”, “anticipate”, “estimate”, “intend”, “plan”, “contemplate”, “seek to“, “future”, “objective”, “goal”, “likely”, “project”, “should”, “potential”, “will pursue”, and similar expressions or variations of such expressions may constitute “forward-looking statements”. These forward-looking statements involve a number of risks, uncertainties and other factors that could cause actual results to differ materially from those suggested by the forward-looking statements. These risks and uncertainties include, but are not limited to our liability to successfully implement our strategy, our growth and expansion plans, obtain regulatory approvals, our provisioning policies, technological changes, investment and business income, cash flow projections, our exposure to the market risks as well as other risks. The company does not undertake any obligation to update forward-looking statements to reflect events or circumstances after the date thereof.