Company Description
T1 Energy Inc. (NYSE: TE) is an energy solutions provider focused on building an integrated U.S. supply chain for solar and batteries. According to the company’s disclosures, T1 Energy positions itself as one of the leading solar manufacturing companies in the United States following a transformative transaction completed in December 2024. The company emphasizes a complementary strategy that combines solar manufacturing with battery storage, with operations based in the United States and plans to expand further across America, while also exploring value optimization opportunities across a portfolio of assets in Europe.
Business focus and operating footprint
T1 Energy’s core business centers on manufacturing and selling photovoltaic (PV) solar modules for U.S. customers. The company describes itself as building an integrated, domestic silicon-based solar supply chain, connecting upstream materials to downstream module production. Its G1_Dallas facility in Texas is an operational solar module plant with a nameplate capacity of 5 GW of modules, using high‑efficiency TOPCon technology as referenced in company news. G1_Dallas is described as one of the world’s most advanced solar module facilities and is expected by the company to support multi‑gigawatt annual production.
To complement module manufacturing, T1 Energy is developing its G2_Austin solar cell fabrication facility in Rockdale, Texas. The first phase of G2_Austin is planned as a 2.1 GW high‑efficiency TOPCon solar cell fab, with a two‑phase development plan that could total 5.3 GW, according to company announcements. T1 Energy states that cells from G2_Austin are expected to be used in modules produced at G1_Dallas, forming a domestic cell‑to‑module manufacturing chain aimed at U.S. energy developers seeking domestically produced solar products.
Integrated U.S. solar supply chain strategy
The company repeatedly highlights a strategy to build an integrated U.S. polysilicon solar supply chain. In its public communications, T1 Energy notes contracts to source hyper‑pure, U.S.-origin polysilicon from Hemlock Semiconductor and solar wafers from Corning Inc. in Michigan. It also references an agreement with Nextpower to use patented steel module frame technology for G1_Dallas modules, supporting a shift toward domestically produced frames using locally manufactured specialty steel.
T1 Energy describes this network of partners and facilities as a means to offer domestic solar modules from a traceable and reliable solar supply chain, with an increasing percentage of domestic content. The company has stated expectations that modules incorporating cells from G2_Austin will reach more than 60% domestic content once the first phase of G2_Austin is in production, and that domestic modules with domestic cells are viewed by its customers as valuable in light of trade and tariff uncertainties.
Policy, tax credits and regulatory positioning
T1 Energy’s business model is closely linked to U.S. energy and industrial policy. The company repeatedly references Section 45X production tax credits and has disclosed the accrual and monetization of these credits. In December 2025, T1 Energy announced the completion of a $160 million sale of Section 45X production tax credits to a U.S. financial institution, describing this as its first sale of such credits and an important step in validating its ability to monetize them.
The company also reports extensive work to comply with the One Big Beautiful Bill Act (OBBBA) provisions governing “Foreign Entities of Concern” (FEOC). T1 Energy has outlined a series of transactions and corporate governance changes intended to maintain eligibility for Section 45X tax credits, including amendments to its certificate of incorporation to establish limits on foreign ownership of its capital stock, adjustments to equity and debt relationships with Trina Solar, and changes to intellectual property licensing arrangements so that licensed IP is held by an entity the company believes is not a FEOC.
Facilities and capacity development
From its disclosures, T1 Energy is advancing a multi‑site manufacturing footprint in Texas. G1_Dallas is an operational 5 GW module facility that the company expects to ramp to higher annualized production rates. T1 Energy has reported that G1_Dallas production is expected to achieve a 4.5 GW annualized run rate in a future quarter, more than twice the rate averaged in the first three quarters of 2025, and that it has signed multi‑gigawatt offtake contracts for G1_Dallas module deliveries.
G2_Austin is described as an anticipated multi‑hundred‑million‑dollar investment in advanced American manufacturing. The first 2.1 GW phase is expected by the company to substantially increase domestic silicon cell supply, with construction already underway according to company news. T1 Energy has indicated that the second phase of G2_Austin is expected to add 3.2 GW of capacity, and that the site could potentially be expanded further based on demand and offtake agreements.
Commercial agreements and customer relationships
T1 Energy’s public announcements reference commercial agreements that support its manufacturing plans. The company has signed a three‑year contract with Treaty Oak Clean Energy, LLC, an independent power producer, to supply a minimum of 900 MW of solar modules built with domestic solar cells from the planned G2_Austin fab. T1 Energy describes this agreement as part of its commercial strategy to provide customers with traceable, high‑performance silicon‑based modules that are expected to comply with federal rules governing foreign content.
The company has also disclosed multi‑year frame supply arrangements with Nextpower for steel module frames, and a minority equity investment in Talon PV LLC, which is developing a separate solar cell fab in Texas. These relationships are described as supporting T1 Energy’s mission to establish a domestic solar supply chain and to utilize advanced manufacturing for high‑efficiency TOPCon solar cells.
Capital formation and corporate structure
T1 Energy is listed on the New York Stock Exchange under the symbol TE, with its common stock and associated warrants registered pursuant to Section 12(b) of the Securities Exchange Act of 1934. The company has used both equity and convertible debt offerings to fund its growth plans. In late 2025, T1 Energy completed public offerings of common stock and 5.25% convertible senior notes due 2030, and has also entered into registered direct offerings of common and preferred stock, including Series B and Series B‑1 convertible non‑voting preferred shares.
These financings are described by the company as supporting working capital, capital formation for the first phase of G2_Austin, efforts to comply with FEOC‑related provisions of OBBBA, and general corporate purposes. T1 Energy has also reported changes to its certificate of incorporation, including an increase in authorized common shares and provisions addressing foreign ownership limits, as well as amendments to its bylaws regarding director removal.
Governance, compliance and investigations
In its SEC filings, T1 Energy has disclosed governance and compliance‑related developments. These include an amended and restated cooperation agreement with Trina Solar that removed Trina’s right to designate directors to T1 Energy’s board once certain conditions were met, and amendments to commercial and intellectual property agreements with Trina affiliates to support FEOC compliance.
The company has also reported that it and an executive received grand jury subpoenas from the U.S. Department of Justice and a voluntary document request from the U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission relating to the sale of the company’s stock in the second half of 2023 on the account of that individual. T1 Energy states that it is cooperating with both agencies and notes that it is not possible to predict the duration, outcome or impact of these matters based on current information.
Position within the industrials and electrical equipment sector
T1 Energy is classified in the Industrials sector under Electrical Equipment & Parts. Within this context, the company’s disclosures emphasize manufacturing of PV solar modules, development of a domestic solar cell fab, and integration of upstream materials such as polysilicon, wafers and frames into a U.S.-based supply chain. Its strategy, as described in public statements, is oriented toward serving U.S. customers seeking domestically produced, FEOC‑compliant solar energy products, while also maintaining a complementary battery storage strategy.
FAQs
The following questions and answers summarize key aspects of T1 Energy Inc. based solely on the company’s public statements and regulatory filings.