By John Lettice
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Published Friday 25th January 2008 15:54 GMT
DLD08
Cost has been a major brake on the take-up of solar power, and Faiman points out that solar has only caught on in countries like Germany, where it is subsidised. There, electricity suppliers are obliged to buy in surplus power from domestic solar systems at more than the market rate, which makes solar an attractive option for German consumers, despite Germany being relatively unattractive from the point of view of available sunlight. According a Faiman a German rooftop would produce the equivalent of one barrel of oil over two years, whereas the same roof in the Negev would do it in one.This favourable economic climate also means that one of Nanosolar’s first contracts is for a 1MW solar power station <http://www.nanosolar.com/pr11.htm> in Eastern Germany.
Faiman explains how solar could fix Israel’s power requirements in 1 Gigawatt units. A single 1GW solar plant would be comparable in output to a large conventional power station, and would cost •1 billion to build. One plant would produce 2 Terawatt Hours of electricity every year, which would be enough to cover annual growth in Israel’s power demand. With each plant producing the equivalent of •200 million, the first five plants pay for the sixth. Assuming a 30 year lifespan for each plant, in year 29 you have to start building two per year (unless, presumably, you think you’ve got enough electricity by then, or you’ve run out of customers and/or desert).
“This works after a fashion anywhere except Antarctica,” says Faiman.
The amount of space the plants take up will depend on the efficiency of the cells - Faiman sees cells of 60 per cent efficiency being feasible, and it ultimately being possible to build 1GW plants on 5 km. sq. apiece.
Gotchas? Solar doesn’t work at night, and Faiman concedes that storage of energy is therefore an issue. But if, say, you had a country that was switching over to electric cars,
Liaison Officer for Belgium of Ben-Gurion University of the Negev
P.B. 26, Poste Ixelles Louise
1050 Brussels, Belgium
phone: 0032-495-990119
fax: 0032-2-6437911
email: rheenen_van@yahoo.com
www.bgu.ac.il/associates
Posted in energy/bioenergy/biofuels
