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 »  Home  »  Blogs  »  Cheaper solar panels
Cheaper solar panels
By Green Living Tips | Published  09/25/2007

Oh my.. cheaper solar panels; in fact - half price.. happy dance.. well, semi-happy dance anyway:)

Colorado State University's revolutionary method for creating low-cost, high-efficiency solar panels is gearing up for mass production.

The technology developed by mechanical engineering Professor W.S. Sampath of CSU enables panels to be produced for less than $1 per watt, which is likely to bring down pricing to end consumers to a very cheap $2 per watt; i.e. a 150 watt solar panel may be priced as low as $300. Currently, 150 watt solar panels cost around $600 - $800.

These panels will reduce the cost of solar generated energy to a point where it is very competitive with traditional mains electricity pricing in some parts of the world! Why go nuclear when you can go thermo-nuclear (the sun) instead!

The breakthrough is in the raw material -  cadmium telluride instead of crystalline silicon. Cadmium telluride converts solar energy into electricity more efficiently and solar panels using this material need 100 times less semiconductor material than crystalline silicon panels according to the University. There's also less waste in the manufacturing process which helps contribute to the lower cost per unit.

The panels will be produced in a new 200-megawatt factory that is expected to employ up to 500 people. Based on the average household usage, 200 megawatts will power 40,000 U.S. homes. Production will begin by the end of next year. .

This is certainly good news - there is one major problem though. I'm no chemist, but I know that cadmium is a rather nasty heavy metal that cumulates in plant and animal tissues - it's a cumulative poison. Cadmium is a 'probable carcinogen' in humans and animals and has a high short and long-term toxicity to aquatic life.

Even though the material used in these panels is cadmium telluride; that doesn't lessen the potential health and environmental risks.  The use of this substance creates a major challenge in terms of production, disposal and recycling (?) of the panels. Let's hope those issues are well and truly sorted before production starts cranking.

Read more about cadmium telluride solar panels


 
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Michael Bloch
Green Living Tips.com
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Comments

  • Comment #1 (Posted by jake3988)

    Thanks for pointing me here, glad you're already 3 steps ahead of even me :)

    Through research, I've found a few other techniques. There's new solar panels I've found made using heliotubes, which reduces the need for silicon-based energy-intensive PV cells by around 80 to 90%. Unfortunately, I don't know if this will reduce cost and if so by how much.


    The recycling is a problem with electronics we get. We're a disposable society, computers, monitors, etc being thrown away everyday.

    We really need more ways to be able to recycle. Not only because they poison the environment (lcds contain mercury), but because computers are also made from energy-intensive materials.


    The good news with solar panels is most come with between a 20 and 30 year warranty. So we do still have time. But let's not hope it's like CFLs where there's so few places to recycle.
     
  • Comment #2 (Posted by Michael - Green Living Tips)

    Hi there Jake - heliotubes? Never heard of them; thanks for mentioning it, I'd be interested in learning more.

    Yep, the situation with CFL's is a bummer - while most of the original small amount of mercury in them has disappeared by the end of their serviceable lives, little x X million = lots. Currently, I'm just holding on to the old CFL's we have until recycling facilities are available, or I'll likely take them to a toxic chemical recycling facility across town when I do my big shed cleanup.

    For others interested in learning more about CFL disposal and recycling; I published an article on the topic a while back:

    http://www.greenlivingtips.com/articles/157/1/CFL-disposal-and-recycling.html
     
  • Comment #3 (Posted by JJ2000426)

    None of the solar companies based on CdTe (cadmium telluride) will go any where but an eventual bankruptcy, due to the fact that tellurium is a very scarce resource on earth, and the extremely limited annual tellurium production of the world is quickly used up by other industry needs, like metal alloying, rewritable CDs and DVDs, and the next generation phase change memory. Read this:

    http://www.seekingalpha.com/article/55959-the-tellurium-supernova

     
  • Comment #4 (Posted by Michael - Green Living Tips)

    Looks like NanoSolar will be the initial winner in the cheap solar panels stakes. They've started shipping thin film panels that will cost the end consumer around the same as the ones mentioned in this post:

    http://www.greenlivingtips.com/blogs/180/Cheap-thin-film-solar-panels.html
     
  • Comment #5 (Posted by Ken)

    Home depot noe recycles cfls
     
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