Showing posts with label Concentrated Solar Power. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Concentrated Solar Power. Show all posts

Friday, September 02, 2011

Was the Treasury right about cutting support for larger solar installations?

PV panels on a solar power station
The UK solar PV industry has been griping about the loss of support for installations over 50kW, but the big market changes happening elsewhere in the world suggest that the Treasury may have - albeit accidentally - backed the right horse.

Today's big announcement is the filing for bankruptcy of a California firm, Solyndra, that made photovoltaic modules - despite it having received over half a billion dollars of subsidy from the Obama administration. Republicans are already seizing on this as proof of wasted taxpayers' cash.

Contrarily, there has been a recent trend in the American sunbelt areas for plans for big solar power station developers to switch from using solar thermal technology to PV. At least three gigawatts of PV has been gained this way from solar thermal.

A year ago, my money was on solar thermal to be the favoured renewable technology of the future in these sunbelt areas with their clear, hot skies.

Solar thermal is well understood, and even offers the prospect of cheaper energy storage than the batteries that must be utilised with PV modules - they use molten salt to store the sun's heat for the night-time in order to continue to drive the plant's turbines.

Solar thermal plants have a further advantage - they can be hybrid plants, cogenerating the heat required to power the traditional design of electricity generating turbines with other fuels such as coal or gas.

But, if PV is now in such demand, why is Solyndra closing down, with the loss of 1400 jobs?

It is because prices of solar modules have fallen astonishingly fast.

Prices of PV modules coming out of China have fallen by 30% and are 10 - 20% cheaper than U.S.-made panels.

For three years there has been an oversupply of modules. Factory gate prices are now much cheaper than retail prices. In Europe they average Euros 2.51 per peak watt. Some are available for as little as $1.30 a peak watt.

Cheaper labour forces has led to factories being built in low-cost locations like Mexico, China, Taiwan and Eastern Europe for module production by big Western names such as Q-Cells, BP, SunPower and Evergreen - which filed for chapter 11 restructuring bankruptcy last month due to the competition from the far east.

(It's slightly more complex than this in Solyndra's case - Solyndra invented a solar panel that didn’t use expensive silicon, but since then - fortunately - the price of silicon has plummeted, leaving Solyndra's panels too expensive to compete.)

In America, solar is supported by policies at the federal, state and local levels.

At the federal level, there are Investment Tax Credits (ITC) and Treasury Cash Grants to support investments in the PV industry. At the state level, Renewable Portfolio Standards (RPS) fuel demand from utilities, which is responsible for % of 31% growth in the US market, projected to rise to 60% in 2015 by market analysts Solarbuzz.

It forecasts the US to become the third-largest solar photovoltaic market, behind Germany and Italy in 2011, leaping from 5% of the world PV market to 12% by 2015.

Italy is having a solar renaissance. Today a completion of a 48MW power station is being celebrated in North Italy, built by German firm S.A.G. Solarstrom. It will produce more than 64 million kWh of power per year. The project is the largest so far in the history of S.A.G. Solarstrom AG and its sales process is also going according to plan.

The company's CEO, Dr. Karl Kuhlmann, said that its 2011 forecasts of EUR 280 million sales were on schedule “despite the German market losing a lot of momentum” due to the reduction in feed-in-tariffs in Germany.

Part of the reason for giving a stimulus to a domestic market like feed-in-tariffs is to force down prices by encouraging mass-production. Other countries have had these tariffs for years - and it looks, globally - as if the tactic has been phenomenally successful.

So successful that China is copying it – with a new feed-in-tariff (FIT) incentive programme that will potentially increase installations to reach a total of 2.4GW in 2012.

In 2010, U.S. solar firms achieved a positive trade flow of $1.9 billion globally, (GTM Research and SEIA®’s U.S. Solar Energy Trade Assessment 2011.

It was a record year, with exports of over $5.6 billion, being shipped mostly to China and Germany, and imports of $3.7 billion of mostly already assembled PV modules mainly from China and Mexico.

The trade balance in PV technology with China was positive to America's benefit by $240 million - but mainly in capital equipment and the raw material polysilicon.

China sold the PV modules it made using these back to the U.S. This trend is now only going to increase. China will dominate the solar module supply market, and the world will benefit from lower prices.

Back in the UK, which sadly doesn't get as much sunshine as California or Italy, the amount of electricity you can generate per pound spent on photovoltaics is far less than that you can get by spending it on other renewable energy sources, like wind or biogas.

A feed-in-tariff favouring householders may be a good way of popularising renewable energy and energy awareness among the general public, but it is not a cost-effective way to generate energy.

With prices at record lows for the modules it will be interesting to see if the UK medium-scale solar installation sector still manages to find good business despite the reduced subsidies, or if developers and land owners like farmers realise it makes more financial sense to invest in other technologies.

Thursday, May 26, 2011

PV will be as cheap as grid electricity by 2015 in southern UK

The growing maturity of the renewables industry is indicated in a taster for an imminent report from the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change (IPCC) which looks at the growing deployment of different technologies and urges the continuation of stable policies to support changes in the energy system.

Speaking about the report, one of its authors, Sven Teske, predicts that parity for photovoltaics will occur by 2017. That is the point at which solar electricity is the same price as conventional electricity.

Prices have been coming down very fast recently, as the following table shows:







Module pricing per peak wattunitJune 2010May 2011% reduction in 11 months
Europe €/watt4.132.6965%
US $/watt4.233.0773%
Lowest mono-crystalline module price$/Wp2.231.881%
€/Wp1.651.2173%
Lowest multi-crystalline module price $/Wp1.741.84106%
€/Wp1.291.2395%
Lowest thin-film module price$/Wp1.761.3778%
€/Wp1.30.9271%

[source: solarbuzz.com]

Some countries - Spain, Italy, France and Germany - will reach grid parity by 2015. As for Britain, he predicts that this will occur in the southern part of the UK too, because it receives as much sunshine as the north of Germany.

But it won't happen in Scotland or Bulgaria, for example; in the first case there is not enough sunshine, and in the second case the price and the consumer reach is too low.

But Teske warns “if the PV industry wants to achieve a larger market penetration they need to be involved in storage, peak demand delivery and development of the smart grid".

Teske cautions that the renewable industry must watch out for very aggressive lobbying from nuclear power, gas and shale gas. He says, "in Spain, the gas lobby went straight for the renewables industry," and this may be partly why the feed in tariff for solar in that country was suddenly withdrawn with disastrous consequences.

Above all, a secure and lasting policy landscape is what is required.

Teske also says that the situation regarding concentrated solar power is fascinating. "If you added up all the announcements of concentrated solar power projects in Egypt, they would have 120% renewables already. What really counts are connected systems – not announcements – and there have been relatively few of those yet."

The Desertec project remains highly optimistic that it can find investors despite the political uncertainty in north Africa.

Turkey is another country that is, perhaps surprisingly, forging ahead with renewable energy with a new 100MW solar plant and with the intention of powering Antalya completely by solar power, and very good wind resources.

Wednesday, October 24, 2007

Low Carbon Kid's links: Environmental Blog Roundup

A few random links

Hallowe'en Blackout
Low Carbon Kid's links: Environmental Blog Roundup

Special Halloween action from Climate Action - Blackout Britain (Lights Out for the Feast of Playful Darkness 31st October 2007 4pm - 5pm).

And for those who fancy targeting shops that leave their lights on all night - A letter to post through their doors.

I was contacted following my blog earlier this month on CSP (Concentrated Solar Power) to ask me to promote CSP Today - an information provider for the industry - their next event takes place in Sevilla, in November 5-6.

Monday, October 15, 2007

Concentrated Solar Power could power Europe, the Middle East and Africa

Harnessing the sun's energy on just 6,000km2 of desert in North Africa would supply energy equivalent to the entire oil production of the Middle East of nine billion barrels a year, according to the German Aerospace Centre.

It believes that solar thermal power plants could supply 68% of North Africa's as well as all of Europe's electricity by 2050.

One company that agrees is Flabeg, a German manufacturer of parabolic trough mirrors.

Its new mirror can concentrate 92% of the sun's rays onto an absorber tube with a diameter of 70mm or less.

It expects to sell these to CSP (Concentrated Solar Power) stations in Spain and North Africa and is already supplying 210,000 to the 50 megawatt solar thermal power plant, Andasol II, in Spain, the biggest in Europe.

Europe's first commercially operating solar thermal tower plant went into operation in April in Sevilla, Spain, generating 11 MW.

The German Aerospace Center has built an experimental solar thermal tower power plant in Julich, Germany, to be commissioned in 2008.

A European Commission-funded research programme report published in September also argued that CSP is "clean energy that can help the EU to meet its 20% target for renewable energies and its broader energy goals."

CSP technologies could make a "significant contribution to developing a more sustainable energy system" especially in southern Europe and North Africa.

Under FP5 and FP6 (5th and 6th EU Research Framework Programmes), the EU contributed €25 million to research projects to develop CSP technologies.

Solar research will be promoted within the FP7 that runs until 2013 with €50 billion in four main components.

> Report explaining the progress of numerous demonstration projects