With
all the government involvement in “green” energy, less than 0.1 percent of all
electricity produced in the U.S. is generated by solar panels. Stimulus funding
and tax incentives have kept the solar industry alive worldwide. When
government funding stopped, as it has been the case of four large solar panel
manufacturers in Germany and numerous ones in the U.S., those companies
declared bankruptcy.
Photovoltaic
solar panels can be used on a small or large scale while concentrated solar
technologies can only be used for utility-scale electricity generation. This administration declared in the Blueprint for a Secure Energy Future:
“We
invented the photovoltaic solar panel, built the first megawatt solar power
station, and installed the first megawatt-sized wind turbine. Yet today, China
has moved passed us in wind capacity, while Germany leads the world in solar.”
What
bureaucrats fail to mention is that the four largest German suppliers have gone
bankrupt and twelve American manufacturers involved in solar panel production
and/or renewable energy storage have filed for bankruptcy. Amy Payne of
Heritage Foundation calls the twelve American manufacturers “the Green
Graveyard of Taxpayer-Funded Failures.”
Alexandre
E. Becquerel discovered the photovoltaic effect but it was the American
inventor, Charles Fritts, who made the first solar cell in 1883. RCA, Texas
Instruments, and the Japanese used PV panels on a small scale. It was the oil
crisis of the 1970s that increased the attractiveness of solar panels but they
remained expensive. President Carter offered the first “direct federal support
for solar [panel] manufacturing.”
There
are two types of solar panel manufacturing:
-
Crystalline
silicone system
with four stages of production, polysilicon manufacturing, wafer manufacturing,
cell manufacturing, and module manufacturing
-
Thin-film PV (a newer
method, similar to flat panel displays manufacturing for TVs, computer screens
and cell phones)
A
polysilicon plant requires $500 million-$1 billion in construction capital.
European, American, and Japanese companies dominate the polysilicon
manufacturing. Polysilicon, which is based on sand, represents about one-fourth
of the total cost of a solar panel.
(Green
Rhino Energy, Value Chain Activity: Producing Polysilicon,
greenrhinoenergy.com/solar/industry/ind_01_silicon.php)
The
production of solar glass requires massive capital and large shipping costs.
Sixty percent of the global supply is produced by four manufacturers, Asahi,
NSG Group, Saint Gobain, and Guardian.
(Green Rhino Energy, Value Chain Activity: Manufacturing Solar Glass,
greenrhinoenergy.com/solar/industry/in_15_solarglass.php)
According
to Paula Flowers, Asahi Glass of Japan produces more than 50 percent of the
world’s solar glass through its AGC Solar, a Belgium-based company. Its factory
in Kingsport, TN produces solar glass for the U.S. market. (TN Solar Energy
Activities Update, TN Chamber of Commerce and Industry, October 7, 2011)
The
Department of Energy estimates that the plant manufacture of 120 MW of solar cells
per year would need at least $40 million in initial investment. The solar cells
are cut wafers into 5X5 or 6X6 inch pieces linked by copper leads. A wafer is a
shaped polysilicon into an ingot.
(U.S.
DOE, Energy Efficiency and Renewable Energy, Solar Photovoltaic Economic
Development, Building and Growing a Local PV Industry, November 2011)
The
modules weigh 34-62 pounds and are comprised of 60-72 cells covered by solar
glass to protect against environmental damage and are attached to an aluminum
frame and supported by a plastic backing.
Currently, lack of profitability has driven the consolidation of the solar panel industry into the hands of ten companies that control half of the global production of photovoltaic solar panels and they are located in China and Taiwan who subsidize exports and have been accused of engaging in dumping of products on foreign markets at prices lower than prices charged on domestic markets. China currently exports 95 percent of all the photovoltaic panels it produces. (CRS Report for Congress, April 27, 2012, p. 17)
Federal
programs that created our domestic demand for solar photovoltaic panels have
reached funding limits and have expired such as the 1603 cash grant program,
the advanced energy manufacturing tax credit, and the S. 591, introduced by the
112th Congress to extend the credit, will expire at the end of 2016.
(U.S. Solar Photovoltaic Manufacturing:
Industry Trends, Global Competition, Federal Support, Michaela D.
Platzer, April 27, 2012)
Examples
of government support for solar power include advanced energy manufacturing tax
credit (MTC) which reached funding cap in 2010, Section 1705 Loan Guarantee
Program for “new and significantly improved” technologies, the investment tax
credit (ITC) which ends in 2016, the Section 1603 Treasury Cash Grant Program,
and the Sunshot Initiative of the DOE.
The
White House Fact Sheet lists 27 Solar PV manufacturers who received 48C
Manufacturing Tax Credit (MTC) from approximately $1 million to $142 million. Two
of the companies listed have already filed for bankruptcy: Abound Solar Inc. which received $12.6
million in 48C MTC and Amonix Inc., which received $3.6 million in 48C
manufacturing tax credit. (CRS Report for Congress, April 27, 2012, pp. 28-29)
John
Boehner’s office issued a statement last week that the former Office of
Management and Budget Director ignored warnings on Solyndra’s insolvency –
millions of taxpayer dollars could have been saved by closing the company
immediately and selling its assets. “Instead, the DOE restructured the loan to
Solyndra (a solar cell manufacturer), putting private investors ahead of
taxpayers for repayment if the company closed (crony capitalism). Solyndra’s
liquidation will recover just $24 million of the $527 million that taxpayers
lent to the company.”
A
bill is making its way through Congress, No
More Solyndras Act, which will ban any new loan guarantees from title XVII
of the Energy Policy Act of 2005.
“The
competitiveness of solar PV as a source of electric generation in the United
States will likely be adversely affected both by the expiration of these tax
provisions and by the rapid development of shale gas, which has the potential
to lower the cost of gas-fired power generation and reduce the cost-competitiveness
of solar power, particularly as an energy source for utilities. In light of
these developments, the ability to build a significant U.S. production base for
PV equipment is in question.” (CRS Report for Congress, Summary, Michaela D.
Platzer, April 27, 2012)
Ileana, thanks for your post, your mention of CPV... this has been a very difficiult technology to make work. The area between the lens, and the Multi Junction Cell is hard to keep the environment out of, and power production can and does degrade quickly, other problems are near too numerous to list.
ReplyDeleteIf our Government continues to force us to invest in this Junk, could they at least assure that we have access to the power production contracts and to the power production meter. This would clearly demonstrate the insanity.
well its really sad to know that such a noble cause is being hindered because of falling oil price, but we need to keep the fact in mind that gas might not always be so cheap but solar energy is always free before we stop such initiatives.
ReplyDeleteUnirac
Private sector companies going bankrupt is by no means an advocate for ceasing the battle for sustainable living. Nationalisation might be a good idea, but it won';t change the inherent limitations of the hardware. Solar panels don't work in gloomy climates, wind turbines don't work in cities. Smaller wind-powered systems like those offered by WDS Cardiff just aren't a viable energy solution for the masses.
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