FREMONT (CBS 5) — After filing for bankruptcy last year, Fremont solar
company Solyndra still owes American taxpayers half a billion dollars.
But CBS 5 caught them destroying millions of dollars worth of parts.
At
Solyndra's sprawling complex in Fremont, workers in white jumpsuits
were unwrapping brand new glass tubes used in solar panels last week.
They are the latest, most cutting-edge solar technology, and they are
being thrown into dumpsters.
Forklifts brought one pallet after
another piled high with the carefully packaged glass. Slowly but surely
it all ended up shattered.
And it's not a few loads. Hundreds of thousands of tubes on shrink-wrapped pallets will meet a similar demise.
Solyndra
paid at least $2 million for the specialized glass. A CBS 5 crew found
one piece lying in the parking lot. Solyndra still owes the German
company that made the tubes close to another $8 million.
So why
is a bankrupt company that owes a fortune to creditors, including
American taxpayers, throwing away millions of dollars worth of assets?
Solyndra
is not commenting. But court documents reveal the company received
permission from the bankruptcy trustee to abandon the high grade glass,
the court agreeing that it was of "inconsequential value" because the
cost of storing them exceeds their value.
An employee for
Heritage Global Partners, the company in charge of selling Solyndra's
assets, told CBS 5 they conducted an exhaustive search for buyers but no
one wanted them.
But how exhaustive was that search? The tubes
were never included on the list of Solyndra assets put up for sale at
two auctions last year.
If they were, David Lucky told CBS 5 he would have bought them. "We certainly would have bid on them, yes," Lucky said.
Lucky
owns several large warehouses near Las Vegas. He buys and then resells
manufacturing equipment and components all the time.
"Our company
has bought a lot of stuff over the years. Truck loads and warehouses
full of inventory that companies were just ready to send to the dump,
because they don't want to take the time to find markets for it," he
said.
When Solyndra shut down last year, he bought hundreds of
fully assembled solar panels at the auctions and is reselling them on
eBay. "They're going for a third their original price. They are a great
deal," Lucky said.
He said if given a chance he would have
snapped up the tubes too. "One day some manufacturing company would
eventually need those," Lucky said.
Solar scientist Greg Smestad
agreed they have value. "As a scientist I said 'Wow, this needs to be
studied,'" he said. Smestad has consulted for the Department of Energy.
He
recently bought a Solyndra solar panel to study its technology, which
is completely different from traditional panels. "It can accept both the
direct sun and also track motion, because it's a cylinder," he
explained. "The technology is very promising."
Smestad wrote a
letter to the auctioneers, asking if they could donate to Santa Clara
University any of the leftover tubes after the Solyndra auctions are
completed. "Let one student use this as an inspiration for their career
and that will be worth something," he said. But the auctioneers wrote
back saying they couldn't do that.
"That really makes me sad,"
said Smestad. "Those tubes represent intellectual investment. These
could have had a better value to do public good. I think they owed the
U.S. taxpayer that."
Solyndra was hoping to have sold the entire company by Thursday, but they called off the sale because nobody bid for it.
CBS 5 asked more than once for Solyndra, the auction company and the bankruptcy trustee to talk on camera. But they all refused.
CBS
5 also called the German company that made the glass tubes to see if
they would have wanted the tubes back. After all, they are still owed
almost $8 million dollars. A spokesman said he had no idea they were
being destroyed.
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