S&P Global’s first 2025 Tier 1 Cleantech Companies List stands on 63 solar, wind, inverter and battery suppliers through technology, financial health and sustainability to guide investors and developers.
S&P Global Commodity Insights has released its inaugural 2025 Tier 1 Cleantech companies List, with 63 renewable suppliers on solar modules, inverters, wind turbines and storage systems for battery energy (Bess).
The classification differs from traditional rankings and is designed to offer a transparent benchmark for reliability and long -term performance in an ever -drying supply chain for clean energy.
“This extensive evaluation enables players in the industry to navigate with confidence in the landscape of the best supplier and to identify companies that meet Tier 1’s criteria, including the sustainability of companies,” said Jessica Jin, main research analyst at S&P Glob Supply Chain Research, said told PV -Magazine. “De Tier 1 indication helps both sides of the market to make informed decisions by bringing suppliers to the attention that surpasses a threshold of rigorous, relevant criteria.”
In contrast to land tables that companies compare with each other, De Tier 1 indication identifies companies that exceed a defined threshold in at least four of the six dimensions: market supply, market share, shipping scale, global diversification, financial performance and assessment of sustainability. S&P said that the methodology is based on the results of the results and the Business Advisory Assessment (CSA) of the Company Insights (CSA) to guarantee objectivity.
The classification comes as a global Cleantech production with overcapacity, falling prices and growing regulatory control over sustainability and traceability of the supply chain. Developers and financiers, known as known, are confronted with increasing challenges in evaluating counterparties. The Tier 1 -Framework is intended to reduce the asymmetry of information and to emphasize companies that can withstand cyclical decline. According to S&P data, Tier 1 -Zonne -manufacturers Average EBITDA -Marges registered 12 percentage points higher than the sector average, which underlines the commercial relevance of the distinction.
The schedule of 2025 reflects the global distribution of industrial power, in which Chinese companies dominate all categories. Fourteen module suppliers made the cut, including Trina Solar, Jinkosolar, Longi Green Energy, JA Solar, Tongwei and Canadian Solar, next to the first solar energy of the United States and Hanwha Q cells of South Korea.
In inverters, Huawei, Sungrow, Goodwe, Ginlong and other Chinese manufacturers were accompanied by Enphase Energy, SolarEdge and SMA from the US and Germany. The nine recognized wind turbine companies are China’s Goldwind, Envision, Mingyang and Sany Heavy Energy, as well as European and American Majors Vestas, Siemens Gamesa, Nordex and GE Vertova.
The Bess category shows a greater geographical diversity. Catl, Byd, Sungrow and Trina Solar joined international players such as Tesla, Wärtsilä, LG Energy Solution, Fluence and SAFT. Various companies, including Trina Solar and Canadian Solar, appeared in more than one category and emphasized their vertically integrated positions.
S&P Global said that the list is not investment advice and that companies are mentioned alphabetically within each category. The exercise is intended to offer developers, lenders and investors a consistent, transparent reference point when selecting partners.
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