Sunburnt land has plenty of energy in store
The Australian - Matthew Warren - September 03, 2007
Link: http://www.theaustralian.news.com.au/story/0,25197,22351168-23850,00.html
IN the 1970s,
Back then,
organisations such as Telecom and Australian National Railways needed to supply
electricity to signal points, phone boxes and other remote infrastructure.
In many cases
solar was the cheapest and most efficient means, pioneering Australian
technology development ahead of the world.
In 2004, a
federal Government energy futures white paper identified three low-emission
energy technologies for which
Solar energy
has been idolised for decades as being the perfect
energy source: abundant, clean, quiet and still. It does have an annoying habit
of switching off at night, but all energy can be stored. For instance solar
electricity could be used to pump water up hill and released to run turbines at
night.
The real
constraint is cost.
Just as fossil
fuels such as coal and oil are cheap because they are highly dense forms of
energy, solar is more expensive because it is more diffuse and the race is on
to capture this energy more efficiently and to bring the cost of the technology
down to where it can compete with other supply sources.
Best known are
the heavily subsidised black photovoltaic cells found
on house rooftops that act like mini-peak load power stations, augmenting
household demand during the day, when demand is greatest.
Pioneered at
the
BP Solar bought
out Australian manufacturers Solarex and Tideland and
it now manufactures panels at Homebush in
Typical silicon
cells can convert about 15 per cent of solar energy into electricity, and purer
silicon achieves higher efficiencies but at a higher cost.
World prices
for solar-grade silicon have been pushed up with strong global demand and
competition with the microchip industry, which uses the same material. Although
spot prices have reached up to $300/kg, prices are expected to ease as supply
increases in the next year.
The silicon
accounts for about half the cost of a photovoltaic solar panel but cell
manufacturers have been driving down cost by slicing the silicon thinner.
BP Solar uses
cells of about 200 microns thick, butsome
technologies in
Applying
technology developed by the
Silicon cells
are cut sideways to produce flexible and very thin slivers of about 50 microns
thick, allowing more light to hit the silicon when installed, thereby
increasing its operating efficiency, but so far about a third of the silicon is
wasted in the cutting process.
Dyesol, a publicly listed company at Goulburn in NSW,
is developing lower-cost technology using dye and pigment, instead of silicon,
to create a weaker electrical current when hit by sunlight.
Described by
the company as artificial photosynthesis, the technology is less energy
intensive in manufacturing and, because of its lower cost, can be embedded
directly into building materials.
It will be more
competitive if silicon prices remain high or as it drives
costs down and efficiencies up.
Solar is also
being developed to replicate large-scale electricity from power stations and
Solar Systems
plans on installing more expensive but more efficient Gallium Arsenide
photovoltaic cells, but plans on squeezing more energy out of them by
installing them on high towers and surrounding them with almost 20,000 angled
mirrors called heliostats.
These will
track the sun through the day, concentrating solar energy 500 times stronger on
to the high-performance cells, but will need sophisticated cooling technology
to keep the cells operating efficiently. An aspirational
goal for the technology is to deliver electricity at about $50/mW-hour in the
same range as natural gas.
Cloud cover
reduces the efficiency of photovoltaic cells by 90 per cent and is even lower
for concentrated solar, making location crucial to keep efficiency up and costs
down.
The company has
just placed an order for $24million worth of cells to build solar farms by
2009, manufacturing of the units to be completed in