Solar power will soon be as cheap as
coal
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8 hours ago
This post originally appeared
at Ensia. 
Inside a sprawling single-story
office building in Bedford, Massachusetts, in a secret room known as the Growth
Hall, the future of solar power is cooking at more than 2,500 °F. Behind closed
doors and downturned blinds, custom-built ovens with ambitious names like
“Fearless” and “Intrepid” are helping to perfect a new technique of making
silicon wafers, the workhorse of today’s solar panels. If all goes well, the
new method could cut the cost of solar power by more than 20% in the next few
years.
“This humble wafer will allow
solar to be as cheap as coal and will drastically change the way we consume
energy,” says Frank van Mierlo, CEO of 1366 Technologies,
the company behind the new method of wafer fabrication.
Secret rooms or not, these are
exciting times in the world of renewable energy. Thanks to technological
advances and a ramp-up in production over the decade, grid parity—the point at
which sources of renewable energy such as solar and wind cost the same as
electricity derived from burning fossil fuels—is quickly approaching. In some
cases it has already been achieved, and additional innovations waiting in the
wings hold huge promise for driving costs even lower, ushering in an entirely
new era for renewables.
Solar surprise
In Jan. 2015, Saudi Arabian company ACWA
Power surprised industry analysts when it won a bid to build a
200-megawatt solar power plant in Dubai that will be able to produce
electricity for 6 cents per kilowatt-hour. The price was less
than the cost of electricity from natural gas or coal power plants, a first for
a solar installation. Electricity from new natural gas and coal plants would
cost an estimated 6.4 cents and 9.6 cents per kilowatt-hour, respectively,
according to the US Energy Information Agency.
Technological advances,
including photovoltaics that can convert higher percentages of sunlight into
energy, have made solar panels more efficient. At the same time economies of scale
have driven down their costs.
For much of the early 2000s,
the price of a solar panel or module hovered around $4 per watt. At the time
Martin Green, one of the world’s leading photovoltaic researchers, calculated
the cost of every component, including the polycrystalline silicon ingots used
in making silicon wafers, the protective glass on the outside of the module,
and the silver used in the module’s wiring. Green famously declared that so
long as we rely on crystalline silicon for solar power, the price would likely
never drop below $1/watt.
The future, Green and nearly
everyone else in the field believed, was with thin films, solar modules that
relied on materials other than silicon that required a fraction of the raw
materials.
Then, from 2007 to 2014, the
price of crystalline silicon modules dropped from $4
per watt to $0.50 per watt, all but ending the development of thin
films.
The dramatic reduction in cost
came from a wide number of incremental gains, says Mark Barineau, a solar
analyst with Lux Research. Factors include a new,
low-cost process for making polycrystalline silicon; thinner silicon wafers;
thinner wires on the front of the module that block less sunlight and use less
silver; less-expensive plastics instead of glass; and greater automation in
manufacturing.
“There is a tenth of a percent
of an efficiency gain here and cost reductions there that have added up to make
solar very competitive,” Barineau says.
25 cents per watt
“Getting below $1 [per watt]
has exceeded my expectations,” Green says. “But now, I think it can get even
lower.”
One likely candidate to get it
there is 1366’s new method of wafer fabrication. The silicon wafers behind
today’s solar panels are cut from large ingots of polycrystalline silicon. The
process is extremely inefficient, turning as much as half of the initial ingot
into sawdust. 1366 takes a different approach, melting the silicon in specially
built ovens and recasting it into thin wafers for less than half the cost per
wafer or a 20% drop in the overall cost of a crystalline silicon module. 1366
hopes to begin mass production in 2016, according to van Mierlo.
Meanwhile, thin films, once
thought to be the future of solar power, then crushed by low-cost crystalline
silicon, could experience a renaissance. The recent record-setting low-cost bid
for solar power in Dubai harnesses thin-film cadmium telluride solar modules
made by USmanufacturer First Solar. The company not
only hung on as the vast majority of thin film companies folded, but has
consistently produced some of the least expensive modules by increasing the
efficiency of their solar cells while scaling up production. The company now
says it can manufacture solar modules for less than 40 cents per watt and
anticipates further price reductions in coming years.
Ten years from now we could
easily see the cost of solar modules dropping to 25 cents per watt, or roughly
half their current cost, Green says. To reduce costs beyond that, the
conversion efficiency of sunlight into electricity will have to increase substantially.
To get there, other semiconducting materials will have to be stacked on top of
existing solar cells to convert a wider spectrum of sunlight into electricity.
“If you can stack something on
top of a silicon wafer it will be pretty much unbeatable,” Green says.
Green and colleagues set a
record for crystalline silicon solar module efficiency at 22.9% in 1996 that
still holds today. Green doubts the efficiency of crystalline silicon alone
will ever get much higher. With cell stacking, however, he says “the sky is the
limit.”
A matter of size
While solar power is just
starting to reach grid parity, wind energy is already there. In 2014, the
average worldwide price of onshore wind energy was the same as electricity from
natural gas, according toBloomberg New Energy Finance.
As with solar, the credit goes
to technological advances and volume increases. For wind, however, innovation
has mainly been a matter of size. From 1981 to 2015 the average length of a
wind turbine rotor blade has increased more than sixfold, from 9 meters to
60 meters, as the cost of wind energy has dropped by a factor of 10.
“Increasing the rotor size
means you are capturing more energy, and that is the single most import driver
in reducing the cost of wind energy,” says D. Todd Griffith of Sandia National Laboratories in Albuquerque, New
Mexico.
Griffith recently oversaw the
design and testing of several 100-meter-long blade models at Sandia. His
group didn’t actually build the blades, but created detailed designs that they
subsequently tested in computer models. When the project started in 2009, the
biggest blades in commercial operation were 60 meters long. Griffith and his
colleagues wanted to see how far they could push the trend of ever-increasing
blades before they ran into material limitations.
Their first design was an
all-fiberglass blade that used a similar shape and materials as those found in
relatively smaller commercial blades at the time. The result was a
prohibitively heavy 126-ton blade that was so thin and long it would be
susceptible to vibration in strong winds and gravitational strain.
The group made two subsequent
designs employing stronger, lighter carbon fiber and a blade shape that was
flat-backed instead of sharp-edged. The resulting 100-meter blade design was
60% lighter than the initial model.
Since the project began in 2009
the largest blades used in commercial offshore wind turbines have grown from 60
meters to roughly 80 meters with larger commercial prototypes now under
development. “I fully expect to see 100 meter blades and beyond,” Griffith
says.
As blades grow longer, the
towers that elevate them are getting taller to catch more consistent, higher
speed wind. And as towers grow taller, transportation costs are growing
increasingly expensive. To counter the increased costs GE recently debuted a “space frame”
tower, a steel lattice tower wrapped in fabric. The new towers use roughly 30%
less steel than conventional tube towers of the same height and can be
delivered entirely in standard-size shipping containers for on-site assembly.
The company recently received a $3.7 million grant from the US Department of
Energy to develop similar space frame blades.
Offshore innovation
Like crystalline silicon solar
panels, however, existing wind technology will eventually run up against
material limits. Another innovation on the horizon for wind is related instead
to location. Wind farms are moving offshore in pursuit of greater wind
resources and less land use conflict. The farther offshore they go, the deeper
the water, making the current method of fixing turbines to the seafloor
prohibitively expensive. If the industry moves instead to floating support
structures, today’s top-heavy wind turbine design will likely prove too
unwieldy.
One potential solution is a
vertical axis turbine, one where the main rotor shaft is set vertically, like a
merry go round, rather than horizontally like a conventional wind turbine. The
generator for such a turbine could be placed at sea level, giving the device a
much lower center of gravity.
“There is a very good chance
that some other type of turbine technology, very well vertical axis, will be
the most cost effective in deep water,” Griffith says.
The past decade has yielded
remarkable innovations in solar and wind technology, bringing improvements in
efficiency and cost that in some cases have exceeded the most optimistic
expectations. What the coming decade will bring remains unclear, but if history
is any guide, the future of renewables looks extremely positive.

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