According to a recent LinkedIn post from UbiQD, the company is drawing attention to a guest contribution by Michael Burrows in pv magazine USA that discusses the future direction of the solar industry. The post highlights a shift in focus from pure physics-based efficiency gains toward challenges in materials, chemistry, and manufacturability as solar technologies scale globally.
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The LinkedIn content underscores that incremental efficiency improvements can carry economic value only when paired with long-term reliability, framing this trade-off as fundamentally a materials-engineering problem. By emphasizing the “behind-the-scenes” role of chemical and materials science engineers in enabling durable solar innovation, the post suggests that expertise in advanced materials could be a key differentiator for companies such as UbiQD in a maturing solar market.
For investors, this focus may indicate strategic alignment with segments of the solar value chain where intellectual property, specialized engineering talent, and materials innovation can support pricing power and defensible margins. If UbiQD’s technologies effectively address these material and reliability challenges in scalable ways, the company could benefit from growing demand for high-performance, durable solar products as global deployment accelerates.

