WattStreet Energy is a private procurement platform for verified solar module supply. We work with developers, EPCs, IPPs, utilities, and large commercial buyers who need confirmed inventory, traceable origin, and delivery aligned to construction schedules — not retail listings or unverified offers.
WattStreet combines a public-facing site that explains how we work with a gated inventory environment for qualified buyers. Approved users can review availability, specifications, supplier documentation, and origin details through a more controlled procurement workflow.
This structure gives buyers a faster way to evaluate supply opportunities without turning procurement into a public marketplace.
Origin, location, and compliance now define module value as much as price.
Utility-scale solar procurement no longer ends at unit pricing. Buyers are evaluating where modules were manufactured, where they are physically located today, how origin interacts with UFLPA and FEOC-related guidance, and whether supplier documentation will support domestic content review.
WattStreet is built around that reality. We source modules with documented origin, verify inventory before it reaches a buyer’s commitment, and provide the supplier documentation procurement, legal, and tax teams need to make their own determinations.
WattStreet is built to help qualified buyers review solar module supply across origin markets and U.S. inventory locations. That includes visibility into what is in stock, what is in transit, and what may align with project timing and delivery requirements.
For active buyers, it is not just about what exists. It is about what is verified, what is documented, and what can realistically fit the project.
Global sourcing. U.S. inventory visibility. Controlled access.
Sourcing relationships are private by design.
WattStreet is not a public storefront. Supplier relationships, allocation conversations, serial-level inventory data, and pricing sit behind access review because they are commercially sensitive and are only useful within an active procurement conversation.
Buyers who pass access review receive credentials to the private inventory environment, along with the supporting documentation needed to evaluate fit against their projects.
The solar market is moving quickly. Origin, logistics, documentation, domestic content considerations, and trade-related exposure all affect procurement strategy. WattStreet’s content is designed to help buyers understand those variables and evaluate supply with better context. The FAQ and blog can also support search visibility, which Robert called out on the call as a key discovery driver.
Request access to WattStreet’s private procurement environment to review available inventory, origin documentation, and project-aligned delivery options.