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World's Largest Solar Plant Planned in Bay Area

By Paul Rogers, Mercury News
June 22, 2006   |   8 Comments
Special to RenewableEnergyAccess.com

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"The real innovation is that we're trying to move the photovoltaics industry from the economics of the semiconductor business to the economics of the printing business."

-- Erik Straser, a general partner in MDV-Mohr Davidow Ventures of Menlo Park, one of the venture capital firms that is funding Nanosolar
8 Reader Comments
Comment
1 of 8
June 24, 2006
It sounds very promising but what is the effiency of the cells and what will they cost?

The lower the efficiency, the greater the surface area needed for a given power and then more panels would be needed. Connection expenses and cell support (backing) costs (the modules are paper thin) also have to be added.

adrianakau@aol.com

adrianakau@aol.com
Comment
2 of 8
June 25, 2006
This is a move in the right direction and it proves that private industry and not Federal assistance will get solar kick-started. I wonder if the firm also has plans to use some of its own output to help power itself and thus lower costs? In theory a solar production plant could become self sufficient if planned properly.
Comment
3 of 8
June 25, 2006
This is only the begining.Once agian it is proven the will of the people brings results.Of course it will take expensive investments and a lot of trial and error, but solar power will be an important link in the chain of furture power generation.Inspite of our bungeling,short sighted president. The free market will provide.
Comment
4 of 8
June 26, 2006
Nanosolar says their efficiency is 9-11%, and their cost of manufacturing is about 1/10th the cost of traditional polysilicon cells. Likewise, 1/10th the cost for building a plant.
Comment
5 of 8
Is this new production, new growth that has been unforeseen or does this fit in with the current industry projections of the expansion over the next decade?
Comment
6 of 8
June 30, 2006
Solar Fabrik AG in Freiburg (Baden-Wuerttemberg, Germany) is the first industrial zero-emission factory producing solar cells.

http://www.solar-fabrik.com/index.php?id=27

I am delighted that U.S.A. is picking up the solar PV track and doing it with thorough means.

One aspect escapes me: life expectancy of the cited technology. "Paper thin" is good for resource efficiency, but may be a wild card when applied to buildings with extreme environmental constraints: extreme heat in summer, extreme cold in winter (especially in continental climates), hail, snow ballast, water, and, especially, the extreme fluctuations between these conditions in many "typical" climates in countries where these techniques will be applied in first instance.

Lots of succes, but remember that each technology has its drawbacks. Don't let these frighten you away from another promising development in one of the most sustainable energy technologies of the day: solar it must be, and solar it will be.
Comment
7 of 8
July 3, 2006
Interesting that they claim 450 MW, but still say that "its thin-film technology is not available for sale yet." To me their thin-film technology seems very immature. I believe they have to build _a pilot_ production line before they go all out, and have several ramp ups in production, probably 4 MW, 32, 128 etc.. so for 450 we're talking 2012-2015? NRELs 1GW plant vision is possible, but you really need a good technology, if something else comes along and just wipes you out, well.. you're in trouble - that's a lot of cash burned, even for the 'google' boyz. Anyway, wish them luck, this might just be the first large scale CIGS manufacturing plant.
Comment
8 of 8
April 6, 2007
Even if manufaturing price is cut to 1/10 it does not mean that solar panels price will become 1/10 too.

If we cut down the panel price to 1/10 , it means $0.4 watt per. Let assume company makes 100% profit, even then it will take nanosolar to cell (100 Million/0.4) 250 Mega Watts of panels to recover just the invetment cost ??
I think the price of panels may go down by 50% at most.
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