Silicon Valley Startup Prints $1/watt Solar Panels 519
GWBasic writes "A Silicon Valley start-up called Nanosolar has shipped its first solar panels — priced at $1 a watt. That's the price at which solar energy gets cheaper than coal. While other companies have been focusing their efforts on increasing the efficiency of solar panels, Nanosolar took a different approach. It focused on manufacturing. 'The company [has developed] a process to print solar cells made out of CIGS, or copper indium gallium selenide, a combination of elements that many companies are pursuing as an alternative to silicon.'" The outfit also happens to be backed by Google, a fact that's getting some attention at tech media sites.
Consumer offerings? (Score:4, Insightful)
Re:Consumer offerings? (Score:5, Interesting)
This is huge news. Punch $0.99 a watt into the calculator [daughtersoftiresias.org], and even good chunks of Alaska become economical for installations.
Re:Consumer offerings? (Score:5, Insightful)
The second error in the summary is the current price. The company claims they could sell $1/watt panels, but with 100% of their production for 2008 already purchased, what are the odds they're selling their stuff 4X below market value? Not a chance. The revolution's happening, but it will take a while.
Re:Consumer offerings? (Score:5, Informative)
Re:Consumer offerings? (Score:4, Informative)
Re:Consumer offerings? (Score:5, Interesting)
Re:Consumer offerings? (Score:4, Informative)
Generation does lose a lot from any heat engine (which is currently a required step for anything that generates electricity by making something hot: coal, oil, nuclear, geothermal, biomass, and natural gas). Wikipedia's combined cycle gas turbine article [wikipedia.org] lists 59% efficiency as state of the art. The theoretical limit is not 100% efficiency - it is the Carnot Limit defined by the ratio of the high and low temperatures (natural gas burns at 1600K, the coldest you'll get the exhaust is 400K, so your absolute max is 75% efficiency).
Mechanical-electrical conversion (hydro, wind) is much more efficient. Electric generators are basically motors, and the large ones are commonly 95% efficient. The Francis turbines in use at hydro plants are upwards of 80% efficient at converting water pressure to rotor power. I don't know what the numbers are like for the wind turbines - probably much worse, since the goal isn't to make the turbine blades stop the air entirely.
Photovoltaic solar generation is the worst of them all. The most expensive cells that they put on space satellites are just over 40% efficient. The more cost-practical silicon-based cells are more like 12% efficient. As a result, a new development in large-scale solar is using a bunch of mirrors to focus the light into heat which can then spin a turbine (which may be 35-40% efficient).
Re: (Score:3, Interesting)
I am running the numbers.
Coal is .08$ a kWh.
So for $1000, that buys 1 kW of photovoltaic cells.
If the cells are run for 12,500 hours at full capacity, the price is equal to coal. Past 12,500 hours of full capacity, that's cheaper than coal.
That's 521 days of 24/7 sunlight, for almost two years. Rather unlikely on earth.
The Google tells me [I]A 1 kilowatt peak Solar System will generate around 1600 kilowatt hours per year in a sunny climate and about 750 kilowatt hours per year in a cloudy c
Re: (Score:2)
Re:Consumer offerings? (Score:5, Informative)
Re: (Score:3, Insightful)
Assuming a lifetime of 20 years, a $50 panel producing 50Wh will produce 8760 kW at $.005/KWh, assuming it runs at full capacity 24/7. An actual real world figure would be several times worse, but that still comes out looking very good.
Re:Consumer offerings? (Score:5, Informative)
The reported wattage of a panel is typically the amount of power it will produce when given 1000W/m^2 of sunlight and with the panel maintaining a constant temperature of 25C. 1000W/m^2 is basically your best-case situation here on the surface -- bright, crystal-clear sky on a summer day with the panel facing straight at the sun. Overall, the panel will average produce far less than its rating, but the exact amount is very complex to determine and depends on where you are and what your setup is like, so panels are rated in standard terms. Beyond that, there's also the "derate factor", which is the losses in your system apart from the panels -- wiring, terminals, etc, but most importantly, the losses in your inverter. 0.77 is a good derate factor. The derate factor drops with age. Panels also produce less power with age, but this effect is often overemphasized.
Secondly, you're confusing watts and watt hours. Watts are a unit of power, while watt hours are a unit of energy (a Joule, another common unit of energy, is a watt second). If your panel is producing 1W, then it's producing 1 Wh every hour -- i.e., 8.8 kWh/year. But if it's simply a panel that's rated for 1W, and isn't on a heliostat, you'll probably get something like 0.5 to 1.5kWh/year, depending on where you are.
Re: (Score:3, Insightful)
It's $1/Watt, not $1/Watt-hour. $1/watt is $1000/kW divided by... say 8 hours of full sun per day... time 20 years. That will get you the kWhr price, or about 1.7 cents per kWhr, a fifth the price you mention for coal. Of course, you won't always get 8 hours of full sun per day in all locations, so the numbers are highly variable by location and time of year, but if your numbers are correct, that is significantly cheaper than coal in many cases.
Re:Consumer offerings? (Score:5, Informative)
1 kWh = 3.61 x 10^6 J
$0.07/kWh = 14.3 kWh/$ = 51.6 x 10^6 J/$
solar panel = $1/W = $1/(J/s)
3600 s/h, 24 h/d, 365 d/year --> 31.5 x 10^6 s
51.6 x 10^6 (J/$) / 31.5 x 10^6 (J/year/$) --> 1.64 years (producing at full capacity) makes it cheaper than coal. Even if you only run at 25% capacity on average, taking into account varying daily solar intensity, the investment pays for itself in 6.5 years.
Of course, your other points are valid; burning coal is bad, at least using the current technology. And that $1/W number is still theoretical, so if they're selling at $4/W, then it would take 26 years to be as cost-effective as coal (given constant energy costs; but that time would be much shorter if we have an energy crunch and prices spike--or another Enron-style price-gouging scam, for that matter).
Re:Consumer offerings? (Score:4, Insightful)
Secondly, solar provides great energy during the middle of the day. However, most residential electrical demand happens in the early evening, when people get home from work and turn everything on. Most industrial users of electricity need a constant supply, around the clock. Commercial users need electricity throughout the day, with a spike in the late afternoon as air conditioning demand increases. Solar-electricity provides for some, but not all of these needs. Storing solar energy in batteries, thermal storage systems, or mechanical storage systems doubles or tripples the cost again.
Thus, even with $1/W panels, general-purpose solar power is still 8-10X the cost of coal. I'm terribly doubtful that solar power will ever be economically competitive with coal, UNLESS you factor in the ecological costs. Unless we start taxing utilities for the carbon that they emit, we will not see solar become competitive, beyond little feel-good projects, and home-hobbyists.
Re: (Score:3, Insightful)
Ah, assumptions. Will coal prices stay constant? What about inflation, even if coal supply remains constant? And the 25 year figure was only for $4/W
Re:Consumer offerings? (Score:4, Insightful)
A kWh is like a glass of water, and a watt is like a trickle of water from a leaky tap. A 1 watt panel would take 1000 hours to make one kWh.
If a panel lasts 1000 hours then you're paying $1/kWh, which doesn't compete with $0.07/kWh. If it lasts forever you're basically paying $0/kWh in the long run, so you might as well buy ~10^12 panels and forget about energy problems.
This is why hydroelectric power is appealing: Once built they stay there generating power for only the cost of maintenance, the problem is there are only so many places where a dam can be built.
In a nutshell more info is needed to know if this even counts as progress. What about the materials? Can you get lots of whatever semiconductor they're using cheaply? Does the $1/Watt panel become $1/ 0.01 Watts when it's not facing directly at the sun on a bright day in California?
I'm not looking for any "revolution" from a small start up energy company.
By the way this is an area where nuclear power could become an even better alternative: The big cost of nuclear power is building the plant and decommissioning it afterwards, the uranium is dirt cheap. The price of a kWh from a nuclear plant is made up mostly of the price of building and decommissioning the plant. If a nuclear plant's design can be made so the life is doubled the cost will halve. If a plant that lasts as long as a hydroelectric plant could be designed we could have power too cheap to meter.
Re:Consumer offerings? (Score:4, Insightful)
AIK
Re: (Score:2)
I dunno. Is it?
Shouldn't you do the work to find out that it isn't those things before you whine about it not being them?
Anyhow, here's the deal: you come up with something that people are willing to pay money for you and that you are willing to donate the proceeds from to charity, and you can decide which charity it goes to.
Re: (Score:2)
Re: (Score:3, Insightful)
Yahoo! (Score:5, Insightful)
Can we conver Arizona with these (and use ultracapacitors for night power)? Please?
Re:Yahoo! (Score:5, Interesting)
Re:Yahoo! (Score:5, Informative)
For one, I can't picture production capacity catching up with demand enough to lower prices to that level for at least a decade, and even that would take a trenemdous expansion rate. There's no way Nanosolar is going to *sell* at $0.99/W when the current market price if $5.80/W and they don't have enough production capacity to meet supply. They stated that they can *turn a profit* selling at $0.99/W. They'll sell for $5.70/W, $5.60/W, or whatnot -- whatever's the most they can charge and move all their capacity. They're not idiots. They're going to earn every last dollar they can, and pump it into new production facilities. Only as the market becomes saturated will prices drop.
Secondly, global warming is going to happen even if all killed ourselves today. There's too much inertia behind the problem. What we effect today is what things are going to be like in 2050, 2100, not the next decade or two.
Third, this doesn't address vehicles. Still have to take care of that gorilla in the corner. It also doesn't address industry CO2 pollution unrelated to power demand, such as steel production. Still, it's a great start.
Fourth, you don't need to cover a big expanse of desert at all. There's more than enough rooftop space in the world to meet demand. Example: China has 32521 square kilometers [peopledaily.com.cn] of urban area. Assuming 11% efficiency on these cells and 25% of that urban area being able to be coated in cells, and assuming an average insolation of 200W/m^2, we get a total power production of about 180 terrawatts. Current *world* demand is only 10 terrawatts. See where I'm going with this?
Fifth, ultracapacitors are too expensive for power storage currently. We're still going to need baseload power production until a cheaper method of storing power can be found. One concept that I find interesting relates to electric cars. To charge a car quickly in your garage, you're going to need a home charging unit. Your house just can't deliver power nearly fast enough for a five to ten minute charge. The idea I read is to use those for power balancing: have them charge themselves when there's a glut of electricity and discharge into the grid when there's a shortage. In exchange, utilities would give consumers a significant discount on their power bill.
Re: (Score:2)
Re:Yahoo! (Score:4, Informative)
Of course, what you said is completely untrue [realclimate.org], but hey, who cares? Like most anti-global warming arguments, they sound good to someone who knows absolutely nothing about the subject.
Re: (Score:3, Informative)
Re: (Score:3, Informative)
Re: (Score:2, Insightful)
Coal you burn once, and you're done. Easy price calculation.
With solar, you buy the solar cells. And the regulators (Sunlight's variable ya know). And the battery packs, assuming you're not going directly back into the grid. And maint of said batteries.
And the solar cells aren't producing 100% output for 12 hours/day. And the lifespan of these solar cells are an estimate.
Don't get me wrong, I'm all for this. I'm just very suspcious of an apples to oranges com
Re: (Score:2)
Re: (Score:2)
Probably around the time that you add an extra couple of 100 square metres onto the sun-facing side of your roof so that there's enough surface area to absorb a worthwile amount of energy, or not until they improve the efficiency side of things.
From http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Solar_cell [wikipedia.org] "...a solar cell of 12% efficiency with a 100 cm2 (0.01 m2) surface area can be expected to produce approximately 1.2 watts of power."
Average household consumption is about 2kwh per hour. So, lets so you need 4kwh of solar cells to produce this. So, to make the math easier, lets say 1.0 watts per 0.01m2, thats 4,000*0.01m2, or 40m2. No, that's roughly 430ft2. I'm pretty sure most roofs are about that large. You won't be able to get all you power from the cells, but that's what your grid connection is for (and for selling back the excess power)
What's in your stocking? (Score:3, Funny)
Re: (Score:2)
Seriously, though, power usage at night is much lower than during the day. We have other non-fossil-fuel energy sources that can be used to p
Re: (Score:2)
And if the electric companies have any sense at all, a "global energy grid" should be keeping them up at night. If I were a betting man, I'd say within the next couple hundred years we could see feasibility studies on a global grid.
Re: (Score:3, Informative)
Re: (Score:2)
Re:What's in your stocking? (Score:5, Interesting)
This makes me think once again that the 20th century was an abberation.
Before the 20th century if you wanted to know what time it was you pulled a clock out of your pocket. In the 20th century you looked at the clock on your wrist. After the 20th century you pulled your phone out of your pocket.
Before the 20th century musicians made their money by performing. During the 20th century many musicians made their money by recording music. After the advent of the internet musicians will once again make their money by performing and use their recordings as advertising (as everybody but the RIAA bands do now).
Before the 20th century there were few wires. During the 20th century wires were everywhere - strung from poles, on your phone, TV, computer eqiopment, everything that used electrity. After the 20th century everything is wireless.
-mcgrew
Re: (Score:3, Interesting)
There's only three problems with solar power installations: the cost of solar cells, the cost of inverters, and the cost of storage batteries.
Solar cells without storage batteries is only helpful for things that you only need to run during peak daylight hours--or if you live in an area that doesn't have enough power capability for peak-load use times (such as California, with its regular rolling blackouts in certain areas during the summer).
The huge costs of residential whole-house sola
How practical (Score:2)
However, if I can shingle my roof with these things, all the better!
It's out there: You can walk on solar shingles (Score:2)
http://www.google.ca/search?hl=en&q=solar+shingles+roof&btnG=Google+Search&meta= [google.ca]
Re:How practical (Score:5, Informative)
They are printed on aluminum instead of glass so yes, they are flexible.
Are they fire resistant? Toxic when burning? (Score:5, Insightful)
If you are going to shingle your roof then "are they fire resistant" and "do they release toxic fumes when burning" should be two more explicit first questions.
Re: (Score:3, Insightful)
I can has my tin foil hat and be environmentally friendly at the same time?
Re: (Score:2)
Re: (Score:2)
Re: (Score:3, Informative)
Eventually. (Score:5, Insightful)
Hopefully this will just be the start... (Score:5, Interesting)
Too bad they're already sold out for the first 18 months of production, because at those prices, you could make a typical house solar for about $1500-2000 for the panels, plus another few grand for installation and hookup. At that price, it makes a lot of sense.
Re: (Score:2)
Re: (Score:2)
Is it just my observation, or are there way too many stupid people in the world?
Everyone laments the number of stupid people, but no one stops wonder if they're one of them. :)
Re: (Score:2)
Re: (Score:3, Insightful)
Re: (Score:2)
Re: (Score:2, Interesting)
As soon as I can I'm going to because I'm sick of the high electric bills in the summer. I can do nothing about it because you have to run your air conditioner
Re: (Score:3, Informative)
If that's your goal then you can pretty much scratch solar off you list. One of the first things people learn when they start to look into solar i
Re:Hopefully this will just be the start... (Score:5, Informative)
Not [realclimate.org] really [realclimate.org].
the same alarmists who were warning that everyone would soon burn up because of the ozone hole (which is now smaller, but the hole has always been there) in the 80s
Not [realclimate.org] really [realclimate.org].
But, hey:
Don't try to educate me on the science
Finding the sand comfortable around your head, eh?
Inaccurate summary (Score:4, Informative)
Nowhere in the article does it mention the price of the first run of panels. I'd imagine they are much more expensive than $1/watt.
Here is the link to the auction on ebay (Score:2)
And here is the link [ebay.com]!
Re: (Score:2)
Re: (Score:2)
DOH! (Score:2)
But at a dollar per watt I'd pay $20,000 for a single circuit... oh wait my math is wrong. At 100 volts that aould be $200. So I could power my whole ho
Re: (Score:2)
Powering it at night :-)
Re: (Score:2)
But then solar panels only make juice during the day, so you'd need at least double that to power the whole circuit all day.
Realistically, you could power a house off of an average 8 kilowatt without much conservation, and probably get down to around 5 or so with it, and lower still if you make some sacrifices.
But then you have to get that power on AVERAGE
Re: (Score:3, Informative)
Of course, most designs would require a much smaller up-front investment, because you'll run off the grid when you are using the dryer/stove/ironing/AC, but take advantage of cheaper power for the base load (lights, computer, fridge).
Re: (Score:2)
Re:DOH! (Score:5, Informative)
Additionally, they're not actually $1/watt. That's the theoretical cost if they are able to ramp up production as planned. If you had $1 for every startup that failed in that phase, you wouldn't care how much your solar panels cost.
Re: (Score:2)
If the grid-tie switching equipment costs $15-20K, I must be getting the panels and labor for free.
Re: (Score:3, Informative)
$3500 syncing inverter + $2000.00 of PV array at those prices = a significant savings and almost ZERO maintaince costs or time. Washing them off twice a year with a hose is plenty. and my array never had to have the snow removed. what idiot leaves the PV array tilted that high in winter?
Re: (Score:3, Informative)
Depends on what your expectations are. Were you planning on actually having power during the other 20 hours of the day? If so, then you'll need to have a very large battery array, and about 6 times the solar capacity you've calculated in order to fully charge the batteries during the relatively brief peak hours. Add in a massive charge controller and inverter, and you are pretty clos
Springfield runs on coal? (Score:2, Funny)
Re: (Score:2)
$1? (Score:2)
We need a good acronym like YACC, YASC? (Score:2)
Cost per watt is based on what time frame? (Score:2, Interesting)
When companies report that their solar solution costs $X a watt, is this figure a steady watt/hour figure (e.g 1000W = 1kw/h) during which time the sun is shining on the pannels, or watts generated per hour of direct sunlight, 8 hrs of direct sunlight, every odd Tuesday, what? I always assumed it's a steady watt/hour figure but in this case $1000 would give you 1KWH while they were running, which gives you (assuming you have a battery storage solution) a production
Re:Cost per watt is based on what time frame? (Score:4, Informative)
Watt is a unit of power, not energy. So its watts (presumably, in some specified lighting conditions), not "watt/hour".
Assuming it was average output per 6 hours of usable time a day (which its probably not, its more likely the peak at the best conditions), and presuming also that surface area limits are not an issue (which they may well be), and that $1/watt was the current cost, rather than an estimate of what the technology would eventually provide, yes, $1000 would get you panels that would produce ~$180 kW-h (not kW/h) per month.
Re: (Score:2)
Re: (Score:2)
Regions near the equator would obviously harness more energy more cheaply than say the Canadian arctic where some areas get a few hours of light depending on season.
Units Please! What's the cost per watt hour (Score:4, Insightful)
Re:Units Please! What's the cost per watt hour (Score:4, Insightful)
Presumably, what makes this technology potentially less expensive is it requires less resources to make than silicon solar cells, so it's fairly likely that they have a faster energy payback than silicon cells.
Re: (Score:3, Interesting)
However, I've seen energy payback quoted anywhere from 1-3 years for conventional silicon photo-voltaic solar panels including the glass and metal packaging. As they are supposed to have a life > 20 years I'm not sure your second statement is correct. Do you have a source ?
Re: (Score:3, Informative)
That's actually incorrect. The average till a couple of years ago used to be 1:4, that is, the total production energy was about 1/4 of the energy the panels would generate in their lifetime.
But I guess mods can't be bothered to check facts.
Re: (Score:3, Informative)
However, that is no longer the case. I quote Wikipedia:
Indium (Score:4, Insightful)
Re: (Score:3, Informative)
This according to New Scientist which is quoted in the Wikipedia Article [wikipedia.org] on Indium.
vaporware, anybody? (Score:2)
From the ebay auction:
This solar panel is currently in Seller's possession but it will be held in escrow until 6/1/2009 before local pick-up by the winning bidder (or shipment at cost to the winning bidder).
Um...what?
You really don't want to smoke these CIGS. :) (Score:2)
Break out point very near? (Score:2)
Despite all that, our transportation sector still relies too heavily on imported oil. Till we find a solution
Consumer use? (Score:3, Interesting)
So it may be one of those scenarios where you would have to cover your entire roof, as well as those of your two nearest neighbors, to generate enough power for a single house. In other words, they may be intending this for use in solar farms out in rural areas, where real-estate is not a concern.
Dan East
depends on your latitude and time of year (Score:2, Offtopic)
While the sun might be strong enough at some locations to provide the headline power output for the price paid, is this only going to be on the equator in high summer?
Considering that (in most countries) more power is consumed during the winter months to keep warm, the power output from solar power is at it's lowest so more cells are needed than would be the case to generate the same amount of power during the summer. Likewise, the industrialised countries tend not to be in the areas
Some calculations (Score:5, Informative)
(Up front, I apologize to all the yanks for being an insensitive clod that doesn't use imperial measurements).
Earth's surface is absorbing ~90 petawatts of electricity any give time (Wikipedia), and with 510 million square kilometers of surface area, an incredibly rough generalized calculation says that each square meter absorbs 175 watts (this is a 24-hour average, even though obviously it's all absorbed during daytime). Of course, not all or even most of it can be converted to electricity, but still, that's a huge resource tap. I'd estimate an average home to have a roof surface area of about 50 square meters, which means that on average the sun sends 8kW on your roof. Next, the average American household uses 8900 kWh/year, which produces, again, an average usage of about 1 kilowatt per household. If you tile your entire roof with solar panels, you'd need to be able to convert 12% of heat/light energy to electricity in order to be fully self-sufficient.
An extra bonus is that the more you absorb the sun's energy as electricity, the less of it is converted to heat which dissipates around the planet, and that in and of itself reduces the effect global warming. So you are being twice as productive - not rely on heat-trapping coal, and reduce the amount of heat that saturates on the planet in the first place.
Of course, this would have to be done on a truly massive scale to have any effect, but every bit helps, and if the industry can make it profitable to the consumer (and of course overcome the interests of evil megalomaniac neofascistliberal Big Oil corporations, as any
Re: (Score:3, Informative)
Allow me to teach you about the laws of thermodynamics.
You may be converting the sunlight into electricity instead of heat directly, but unfortunately when that electricity is used, it eventually will become heat.
It doesn't matter what you use the power for. Run a fan? The moving air will eventually slow down via friction and turn into heat. Run a light bulb? The light is e
CdTe vs CIGS (Score:3, Insightful)
They were the first to bring CdTe cells to market, and guess what happened [google.com]
Now, several companies have been working furiously to get the competing CIGS cells going. Miasole, Nanosolar, HelioVolt, just to name a few. FSLR of course beat them to market, and is already a winner, but i am waiting for IPOs for the CIGS companies too
Anything that doesnt use crystalline silicon is going to be huge, and in some instances, already is.
Honda (Score:3, Interesting)
You have it all wrong. (Score:2)
Corrections (Score:5, Informative)
Watt, Watt Hour? (Score:3, Insightful)
Please correct me if I'm wrong here, but I thought a watt was a measure of capacity whereas a watt-hour was what we actually paid for from our electric company as a measure of (what? power? energy?)... So a watt-hour is something like "continuously using one watt for one hour".
For solar, there's no fuel cost. So the $1 gets you a "perpetual" 1 watt. If it lasted forever (which it won't), that'd be an infinite amount of watt-hours.
But coal plants have a fuel cost. So $1 only gets them so much coal, and only so many watt-hours.
Or is that comparing the cost of building a coal plant to building solar panels? Or is it some kind of TCO figure?
Re:Seems good. (Score:5, Informative)
Nobody can "put their money where their mouth is" and "snatch these up", because all of their capacity is currently being eaten up by a 1MW german PV installation. And, one correction to the article: they're not being sold for $0.99. The company has stated that they can turn a profit on them selling them at $0.99. But as long as there's a glut of demand and shortage of cells, it seems unlikely that they'll hit that price. What it *does* mean is that Nanosolar never has to worry about money again. Venture capitalists will be throwing money at them if only Nanosolar lets them. They'll have no problem scaling up production; we just need to be patient.
Re: (Score:2)
Re: (Score:3, Informative)
Yes it would, 1000 times over. There is plenty of renewable energy, the issue is cost, which is where these cells come in. "The total solar energy available to the earth is approximately 3850 zettajoules (ZJ) per year ... Worldwide energy consumption was 0.471 ZJ in 2004." - Solar Energy [wikipedia.org]
Re: (Score:3, Informative)
In a way, this is come full-circle hasn't it?
People in california getting government subsidies to buy solar systems that aren't really economical, and the