

Sure, solar power is greener than electricity from fossil fuel, but that doesn't guarantee that all solar panels are made sustainably. For corporations buying or investing in solar panels for their environmental benefits, it makes sense to keep track of the sustainability leaders -- and to be wary of the potential risks of associating with manufacturers with less sustainable practices.
The good news, though, is that many solar manufacturers are highly aware of the issue, according to a new report from San Francisco-based nonprofit As You Sow. The group, which advocates for environmental and social corporate responsibility, supports solar energy and put out the report – titled Clean & Green: Best Practices in Photovoltaics -- as a guide for investors, consumers and others.
“I was really pleased to see how much awareness there was,” said Amy Galland, the report’s author, adding that solar companies likely want to avoid the criticisms about sustainability that other industries have faced.

Sys1 wrote:We used since the beginning of industrial civilisation 500 billions barrels of oil, aka half of world reserves. Those 500 billions barrels were made by nature in 500 millions of years, meaning it's a sun stock of half a billion years.
So we consumed on average since 1930 (since rate of extraction is actually in constant increase, if not exponential, until it reachs the peak) around 5 millions years of sun stock each year, aka around 14'000 years of sun energy a day!
From there, how the hell it's imaginable to run our civilisation -without even thinking about growth- on solar pannels which would return at best 1 day of energy for each day they are used?
We are about to experience a total collapse of industrial civilisation and massive die off. There is no such thing any more as businnes as usual.
As we hear on mainstream medias that "recovery" is here, oil skyrockets above 100$ a barrel. This is where recovery is an illusion. It's like willing to run faster than your shade. The truth is that never will we again recover from the first wave of peak oil which occured in the form of "subprimes" in 2007-2008.
A wiser question would be : "What can be preserved with far less fossil fuels?"

It depends on your definition of solution. Quantitatively, there's nothing that we can implement that replaces 160 exajoules of energy input into society. Nothing. There are the inefficient solar collection schemes (algae, hydrogen cracking) and the less inefficient solar collection schemes (hydropower, wind) and the somewhat more direct solar collection schemes (solar panels and mirrors), but we have nothing that's as cheap and energy dense in large quantities as oil other than nuclear power, which too has both limits and problems (http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Cubic_mile_of_oil).pstarr wrote:On the other hand solutions seem so apparent, at least to me. So easy peasy.



The funny thing about arable land is that people like to to use the sunlight on it to grow food. That sort of defines "arable." You'd want to place your solar facilities on unarable land, which still might destroy the local ecology in some way, but that's the trade-off no matter what energy system you favor.pstarr wrote:The United States contains 450 million acres of arable land for 300 million people.
Oh, for a world with affordable superconducting transmission lines. Unfortunately, you have to build those and they take some power themselves just for temperature maintenance. Thousands of miles of supercooled materials, which would by necessity have to be buried underground, are neither technically nor economically trivial. If we ever get inexpensive, room-temperature superconductor wire, this may be feasible. Not before.pstarr wrote: Add in a PV park 100 sq. mi* 100 sq. mi in the Southwest (attached to local grids with superconducting transmission lines) and you have your electricity. Done. Power. Next.



Clean energy should play a central role in revitalizing our economy, putting Americans back to work, and keeping America on the cutting edge of innovation and growth. Recently a slew of misguided attacks on the merits of clean energy have exchanged petty partisanship for hard facts.
Here are the top six things you really need to know:
Clean energy is competitive with other types of energy
Clean energy creates three times more jobs than fossil fuels
Clean energy improves grid reliability
Clean energy investment has surpassed investments in fossil fuels
Investments in clean energy are cost effective
Fossil fuels have gotten 75 times more subsidies than clean energy
Here are the supporting details:


pstarr wrote:I guess I'm able to hold two contradictory thoughts in my head at the same time. No one is taking peak oil seriously (and as per Hirsch) and that is very bad news. On the other hand solutions seem so apparent, at least to me. So easy peasy.
While it is true that no amount of alt energy is going to power this consumer based society, or magically resupply the nation with abundant fresh water, arable land, cheap fish, or meaningful employment that does not mean that there are no solutions. They are all around us. But it will mean re-imagining what it means to be an Modern American. That's the problem.


sparky wrote:
the top tier of 10 kw/h per person per day would have to be seriously shrunk


Graeme wrote:I kid you not:
Fact Sheet: 6 Things You Should Know About The Value Of Renewable EnergyClean energy should play a central role in revitalizing our economy, putting Americans back to work, and keeping America on the cutting edge of innovation and growth. Recently a slew of misguided attacks on the merits of clean energy have exchanged petty partisanship for hard facts.
Here are the top six things you really need to know:
Clean energy is competitive with other types of energy
Clean energy creates three times more jobs than fossil fuels
Clean energy improves grid reliability
Clean energy investment has surpassed investments in fossil fuels
Investments in clean energy are cost effective
Fossil fuels have gotten 75 times more subsidies than clean energy
Here are the supporting details:
thinkprogress

In their excellent interactive graphic, Bloomberg Energy Finance calls solar grid parity (when electricity from solar costs less than grid power) the “golden goal.” It’s an excellent illustration of how the right energy policy can help a nation go gold on solar or wallow in metallurgical obscurity. In the case of the U.S., it may mean delaying grid parity by eight years.
In the screenshot below, countries in purple have reached the golden goal in 2012, based on the quality of their solar resource and the cost of grid electricity, as well as a 6% expected return on investment for solar developers.

*But this picture isn’t accurate, because the type of solar policy influences investors’ expected rate of return and solar policies vary significantly across countries. In Germany, their feed-in tariff policy offers long-term, fixed-price contracts for solar. This certainty and policy transparency means lower risk and investors accept a modest 6% return on investment.
In the U.S., however, there is high uncertainty.
Incentives for renewable energy have a habit of expiring based on the vagaries of federal and states legislatures. Incentives come in the form of tax credits, leaving developers dependent on a fluctuating market for tax equity partners to “monetize” the credits. This higher risk means solar developers want higher returns (more like 10% than 6%). (I wrote about this in a report last fall).
The 4% higher expected rate of return means another eight years of waiting for the golden goal, delaying solar grid parity in the U.S. from 2020 to 2028.

In an stunning reversal, Senate Republicans have accepted President Obama's call to end tax breaks for the oil and gas industry, reversing a procedural vote on Thursday that had killed the Mendendez Bill (S. 2204 - Repeal Subsidies and Tax Breaks for the Big 5 Oil Companies), introduced by Sen. Robert Menendez (D-NJ). On Thursday, the bill was defeated by a vote of 51-47, nine votes short of the 60 required to pass.
But in a rare Saturday afternoon session called by Senate Majority Leader Harry Reid (D-Nev.), the measure was swiftly rejuvenated—and passed—after nine of the Republicans who voted against the bill on Thursday had a change of heart after watching a sneak preview on Friday of To the Arctic, a documentary that follows the life of a mother polar bear caring for her two seven-month-old cubs in the Arctic. Narrated by three-time Oscar winner Meryl Streep, To the Arctic arrives in IMAX theaters on April 20.
The surprise passage of the bill puts the Senate more in line with a majority of the American people when it comes to big oil. A CNN/ORC poll taken last week found that 55 percent of Americans believe that oil companies deserve "a great deal of blame" for the recent increase in gas prices. The majority of Congressional Republicans have consistently voted against ending fossil fuel subsidies, which is unsurprising, considering that many Republican lawmakers receive contributions from and invest in the oil and gas industry. But with Saturday's abrupt turnaround, that is likely to change as well.

Clean Energy Patents hit a record high in 2011, up 450 patents relative to 2010 according to the Clean Energy Patent Growth Index. GE took the yearly Clean Energy Patent Crown from GM in 2011 while also leading the Wind and Solar sectors and making the annual top ten in hybrid/electric vehicles. U.S. patent owners hold more U.S. patents than any other country. Also, solar and wind patents continued their rise to pull away from the lower tier of CEPGI sectors while fuel cells continued to lead.
As depicted in the below breakdown of the CEPGI by its sub-components, patents in wind energy were up over 85 percent followed by solar patents at almost 50 percent. Although being the largest component of the CEPGI by far, fuel cells in 2011 were actually down 44 patents. Hybrid/electric vehicle patents were up 20 percent over 2010. Tidal energy and biomass/biofuel energy patents were up 50 and 65 percent, respectively. Geothermal patents were up 2 while Hydroelectric patents was the only sector besides fuel cells that decreased, at 4 fewer patents than 2010.



What's the key to using alternative energy, like solar and wind? Storage -- so we can have power on tap even when the sun's not out and the wind's not blowing. In this accessible, inspiring talk, Donald Sadoway takes to the blackboard to show us the future of large-scale batteries that store renewable energy. As he says: "We need to think about the problem differently. We need to think big. We need to think cheap."
Donald Sadoway is working on a battery miracle -- an inexpensive, incredibly efficient, three-layered battery using “liquid metal."
A variety of fluids have been tested to transport the sun's heat, including water, air, oil, and sodium, but molten salt was selected as best.[66] Molten salt is used in solar power tower systems because it is liquid at atmosphere pressure, it provides an efficient, low-cost medium in which to store thermal energy, its operating temperatures are compatible with today's high-pressure and high-temperature steam turbines, and it is non-flammable and nontoxic. In addition, molten salt is used in the chemical and metals industries as a heat-transport fluid, so experience with molten-salt systems exists in non-solar settings.
The molten salt is a mixture of 60 percent sodium nitrate and 40 percent potassium nitrate, commonly called saltpeter. New studies show that calcium nitrate could be included in the salts mixture to reduce costs and with technical and economical benefits. The salt melts at 220 °C (430 °F) and is kept liquid at 290 °C (550 °F) in an insulated storage tank. The uniqueness of this solar system is in de-coupling the collection of solar energy from producing power, electricity can be generated in periods of inclement weather or even at night using the stored thermal energy in the hot salt tank. Normally tanks are well insulated and can store thermal energy for up to a week. As an example of their size, tanks that provide enough thermal storage to power a 100-megawatt turbine for four hours would be about 9 m (30 ft) tall and 24 m (80 ft) in diameter.
The Andasol power plant in Spain is the first commercial solar thermal power plant to utilize molten salt for heat storage and nighttime generation. It came online March 2009.[67] On July 4, 2011, a company in Spain celebrated an historic moment for the solar industry: Torresol’s 19.9 MW concentrating solar power plant became the first ever to generate uninterrupted electricity for 24 hours straight. It achieved this using a molten salt heat storage design.[68]

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