JinkoSolar's Jinko ESS wins IEC 62443 cybersecurity certification; Musk-linked visit to Chinese PV suppliers
- Jinko ESS North America earned IEC 62443-2-4 certification, validating secure-by-design practices for grid-scale and enterprise storage systems.
- Certification covers threat modeling, risk assessments, secure supply-chain, vulnerability management, and cyber controls across people, processes, products.
- JinkoSolar confirmed a Musk-linked supplier visit but disclosed no contracts, plans, or independent verification.
Jinko ESS wins industrial cybersecurity certification in California
JinkoSolar’s U.S. energy-storage arm, Jinko ESS North America, announces that it receives IEC 62443-2-4 certification from industrial cyber-security authority exida, reinforcing its secure-by-design approach for grid-scale and enterprise storage systems. The Campbell, California unit says the international standard validates its secure development lifecycle (SDL) practices across system design, development, integration, testing, deployment and lifecycle management, rather than treating cyber-security as an add‑on.
Company officials say the certification covers threat modeling, risk assessment, secure supply‑chain practices, controlled vulnerability management and patching processes, and the application of cyber controls across people, processes and products. Jeff Juger, U.S. managing director of Jinko ESS, says cyber-security is a “foundational design principle” shaping architecture, supplier management and incident response planning. Michael Medoff, director of certification at exida, says the independent audit proves Jinko ESS maintains rigorous systems integration, maintenance processes and governance to protect critical infrastructure.
JinkoSolar positions the accreditation as a selling point to utilities, data centres, regulators and sophisticated enterprise customers operating in high‑risk environments. The company, one of the world’s largest solar module producers, says the certification accelerates customer trust for its energy‑storage solutions across key markets including the United States, Europe, China and other global markets where grid interconnection and regulatory compliance are crucial.
Elon Musk‑linked supplier visit draws industry attention
State‑backed Chinese outlets Cailianshe and 21st Century Business Herald report a team linked to SpaceX and Tesla visits photovoltaic suppliers in China, probing equipment manufacturing, silicon wafers, battery modules and next‑generation cell technologies such as heterojunction and perovskite. JinkoSolar confirms a Musk‑linked visit but offers no details on contracts or plans; independent verification is not available.
Analysts say interest from tech giants underscores broader moves by upstream energy consumers into power supply, but they caution that durable demand depends on concrete orders and solved manufacturing challenges. Ke Zong of Shanghai quant fund Minghong Investment says energy, not chip supply, remains the key bottleneck for AI and big tech’s apparent upstream interest is being watched closely by suppliers and regulators.