Dividend Power Score
A single, comprehensive score designed to measure the true strength of a company’s dividend.
This score combines three essential pillars of dividend quality:
Consistency – Measures how reliable the dividend has been over time, focusing on payment history, stability, and the absence of cuts or suspensions.
Payability – Assesses the company’s financial ability to sustain its dividend, taking into account cash flow, earnings coverage, balance sheet strength, and overall financial health.
Growth – Evaluates the long-term growth of both the dividend and the company’s share price, highlighting businesses that consistently increase payouts while creating shareholder value.
Higher scores identify companies that have historically delivered dependable income alongside sustained dividend growth and long-term capital appreciation.
Company Overview
Abound Energy Inc. was a U.S.-based renewable energy company that operated in the solar energy industry, primarily focused on the development and manufacturing of thin-film cadmium telluride (CdTe) photovoltaic solar panels. The company’s core value proposition centered on producing lower-cost solar modules intended for utility-scale and commercial solar installations. Its business model targeted customers seeking large-scale renewable power generation solutions rather than residential solar markets.
The company was founded in the mid-2000s and gained prominence through significant federal loan guarantees and private investment during the early growth phase of the U.S. solar sector. Abound Energy positioned itself as a domestic alternative to established thin-film competitors, emphasizing U.S.-based manufacturing. However, the company ceased operations and filed for bankruptcy in 2012 after failing to achieve cost competitiveness and manufacturing scale. Data inconclusive based on available public sources regarding any subsequent reorganization, ongoing operations, or revival under the same corporate entity.
Business Operations
Prior to bankruptcy, Abound Energy’s operations consisted primarily of a single integrated business line: the design, manufacture, and sale of thin-film solar modules. Revenue generation was intended to come from long-term supply agreements with utility-scale solar project developers and independent power producers, though publicly available filings indicate limited commercial traction before operations ended.
The company’s assets included proprietary manufacturing processes, pilot and commercial-scale production facilities in the United States, and intellectual property related to CdTe thin-film technology. Abound Energy did not maintain a diversified segment structure, international operating subsidiaries, or material joint ventures at the time of its collapse. Data inconclusive based on available public sources regarding the disposition of its assets following bankruptcy proceedings.
Strategic Position & Investments
Abound Energy’s strategic direction prior to bankruptcy focused on scaling domestic solar manufacturing and competing on cost with both crystalline silicon producers and established thin-film rivals. Growth initiatives centered on rapid capacity expansion supported by federal financing and private equity investment. The company received a significant U.S. Department of Energy loan guarantee, which formed a central pillar of its expansion strategy.
The company did not successfully complete any transformative acquisitions, nor did it establish a lasting portfolio of subsidiaries or strategic equity investments. Its involvement in emerging renewable energy technologies was limited to thin-film solar manufacturing. Following its bankruptcy filing, data inconclusive based on available public sources regarding any ongoing strategic investments, successor entities, or continued participation in the renewable energy sector.
Geographic Footprint
Abound Energy’s operational footprint was concentrated in the United States, with manufacturing and corporate activities located primarily in Colorado and Indiana. The company did not maintain verified long-term manufacturing or sales operations outside the U.S., although its products were intended for deployment in utility-scale solar projects that could have served both domestic and international markets.
There is no verified public information indicating sustained market presence across Europe, Asia, or other international regions. Following the cessation of operations, data inconclusive based on available public sources regarding any remaining geographic influence or asset ownership.
Leadership & Governance
Publicly available information confirms that Abound Energy was led by an executive management team typical of venture-backed clean energy manufacturers; however, comprehensive and consistently verified leadership data is limited due to the company’s defunct status and the age of available disclosures. Governance was overseen by a board composed of company executives and investor representatives during its operational period.
Data inconclusive based on available public sources regarding a complete, reliably verified list of executives and directors at the time of bankruptcy. As a result, no current leadership structure can be confirmed, and no ongoing governance framework has been identified.