Congratulations! UL Acceptance for Fire Energy!
Fire Energy Group is the fast-expanding multi-national corporation in distribution and integration of solar photovoltaic industry. On January 2010, Fire Energy Group established subsidiary company in California USA and has reached 1 million US dollars turnover in US market until April 2010.
Fire Energy now has UL Acceptance. This is terrific news and helps demonstrate why Fire Energy’s quality and safety standards are very different from those of most other distributors. The US customers can find Fire Energy solar modules with confidence knowing that they are have been tested and approved for sale in the USA.
In operation for more than five years, Fire Energy becomes to the one of international wholesale/retail solar module companies in the world to be fully compliant, and exactly knows what customers need. On April 2010, FE5A, FE5P, FE6A and FE6P series of mono and poly crystalline photovoltaic modules are listed with ETL/cETL marks, which series cover the rated power range from 150 watt to 240 watt.
In particular, these Fire Energy modules are outsourced by Canadian Solar, the world-leading photovoltaic module manufacturer. Combining top material and technical process from Canadian Solar with strict quality control and marketing experience from Fire Energy, Fire Energy expects to work together with top solar industry players in USA and forward renewable business to a new milestone.
Please find Fire Energy UL certification document here. (Fire Energy UL Certification)
About UL certification
In operation for more than a century, Underwriters Laboratories Inc. is an independent organization that evaluates products, components, materials and systems for compliance to specific requirements, and permits acceptable products to carry a certification mark. A manufacturer of a UL certified product must demonstrate compliance with the appropriate safety requirements. UL has developed more than 1,000 Standards for Safety, many of which is American National (ANSI) Standards, and evaluates nearly 20,000 types of products. A typical standard for electronic products includes not only requirements for electrical safety, but also spread of fire and mechanical hazards. UL develops its Standards to correlate with the requirements of model installation codes, such as the National Electrical Code.