Will solar power ever be as cheap as coal?
Some predict that within five years, it could rival fossil-fuel
energy.
By
Mark Clayton| Staff Writer for The Christian Science Monitor/
December 4, 2008 edition
Lexington, Mass.
“Solar power is the energy of the future – and always will be.”
That tired joke, which has dogged solar-generated electricity for decades
due to its high cost, could be retired far sooner than many think.
While solar contributes less than 1 percent of the energy generated in the
United States today, its costs are turning sharply downward.
Whether using mirrors that focus desert sunlight to harvest heat and spin
turbines or rooftop photovoltaic panels that turn sunshine directly into
current, solar is on track to deliver electricity to residential users at a
cost on par with natural gas and perhaps even coal within the next four to
seven years, industry experts say.
“We’re confident that we’re not that far away from a tipping point where
energy from solar will be competitive with fossil fuels,” said Ray Kurzweil,
a National Academy of Engineers panel member after the panel reported on the
future of solar power in February. “I personally believe that we’re within
five years of that tipping point.”
To do that, however, the cost of electricity produced by rooftop solar
panels, for instance, will need to fall by half – from about 32 cents per
kilowatt hour (kwh) today, including subsidies, to about 15 cents per kwh by
2012, according to a new report by FBR Capital Markets, an investment bank,
and market researcher Solarbuzz.
Evidence of a shift appears to be taking shape around the country. Google,
the Internet search company, has invested in several young solar-power
start-ups with an explicit cheaper-than-coal goal. San Jose, Calif.-based
Nanosolar already claims to be shipping “thin-film” solar panels that
generate electricity on par with the cost of coal-fired power. And in
Lexington, Mass., Frank van Mierlo and Emanuel Sachs are leading a team of
engineers with one audacious mission: Make a silicon photovoltaic cell that
turns sunshine into electricity as cheap as electricity from a coal-burning
power plant.
“There’s no doubt that we’re going to see solar as cheap as coal power a lot
sooner than many people realize,” says Mr. van Mierlo, president of 1366
Technologies, standing beside an industrial furnace inside the company’s
pilot manufacturing facility.
Proof of what he says lies a few footsteps down a hallway where Sara Olibet,
an applied physicist, is painstakingly measuring the efficiency of dozens of
solar-cell prototypes, each with a different combination of chemical
coatings designed to maximize power output.
In her lab, she uses tweezers to select one-inch-square cells and put them
into a refrigerator-size machine that shines light with sun-like intensity.
In addition to efficiency ratings, readings are taken along the light
spectrum to evaluate the cells’ coatings and other aspects being tweaked
toward a single optimum formula.
For 1366 Technologies, whose name is derived from the “solar constant” of
1,366 watts per square meter that strike Earth every moment, the immediate
goal is to produce a 3 percentage point gain in cell efficiency. While
boosting a solar cell’s efficiency from 15 percent to 18 percent may sound
trivial, it would mean a huge cut in production costs, from $2.20 cents per
watt today to $1 a watt – without federal or state subsidies, van Mierlo
says.
At that $1-a-watt level, 1366 Technologies claims it could produce solar
panels with cells delivering electricity to a home as cheaply as the
delivered cost of coal power – about 10 cents per kwh.
“It’s not hyperbole to say that we’re within reach of grid parity,” van
Mierlo says. Adding to that $1 a watt a modest profit and cost of
installation, the delivered cost of power would be about $3 a watt – or 18
cents per kwh – without any subsidies. At that rate, a rooftop residential
solar module would produce power on par with the cost of grid power in the
Northeast today.
Others are less sure. “Relative to every other significant generation
source, solar is still quite expensive today,” says Jim Owen, a spokesman
for the Edison Electric Institute, which represents investor-owned
utilities. “This technology holds significant promise, particularly
utility-scale solar thermal technology. We want to tap into solar
technologies and the sooner the better, but it doesn’t seem around the
corner.”
Still, an array of experts agree that solar could cause a “disruptive” shift
in US energy generation five years from now. When “grid parity” for solar
arrives at that time, the nation will likely see sharp growth in solar
panels installed on residential rooftops, driven not by environmental
concerns, but by a desire for more economical electricity, these energy
industry analysts say.
Next year, enough solar panels will be sold in the US to generate 330
megawatts of power, the FBR projects. But the US could well see a 20-fold
rise in US solar panel sales by 2013, enough to power about 3.5 million
homes with two-kilowatt rooftop solar arrays, it says.
That surge could arrive faster with new federal tax credits that cover 30
percent of the cost of a solar installation. In some states, the news is
even better for solar customers.
“The reality is that even today, there are some places in California where,
with state incentives, solar already has grid parity,” says Robert Margolis,
senior energy analyst for the National Renewable Energy Laboratory.
Nationwide, the date is closer to 2015, he says.
“Even the credit crisis, funny enough, may actually accelerate it by
temporarily squelching demand and causing solar prices to come down faster,”
says Travis Bradford, president of the Prometheus Institute, a think tank
focused on solar power.
Several analysts expect the solar panel industry to soon enter a brutal
shakeout that will eliminate many weaker companies, but also benefit
consumers by chopping solar panel costs in half.
Right now companies like Nanosolar that already have funding have soldiered
on. Van Mierlo says 1366 is shepherding its resources. It could launch a
manufacturing facility in 2010, but the company can afford to wait
patiently, refining cell-manufacturing technologies until the perfect moment
for full production, he says.
“In five to seven years, the idea of building a home without solar energy on
it will be as silly as building without plumbing,” Mr. Bradford says.
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