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Solar and Semiconductor Industries Come Together In San Francisco

By Graham Jesmer, Staff Writer
July 23, 2008   |   7 Comments

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"Now certainly we're looking at wind, we're looking geothermal, we're looking at other sources, but from an electronics point of view we saw that we had the most immediate potential impact in solar photovoltaics."

-- Kevin Kayser, Senior Marketing Manager, National Semiconductor
7 Reader Comments
Comment
1 of 7
July 25, 2008
Phil - Good point! From what I've read, it sure seems that for utility scale application solar thermal technologies make much more sense than PV. But that's not to say that PV won't be playing a huge role in the applications where it makes sense - for distributed power generation on premises. I think energy is one of those things like processor and transmission bandwidth - you can never have too much of it.

But back to your point on solar thermal - here's a link to an excellent NPR Science Friday piece focusing on what's going on in the solar thermal space now. (It also clearly makes the distinction for the applications of solar thermal vs. PV.)

http://www.sciencefriday.com/program/archives/200803141
You can click on "listen" in the upper left of the screen.
Comment
2 of 7
July 25, 2008
In the lead line of the article, the solar author mistakenly assumes that solar is photovoltaics. The PV industries (who push this newsletter) want to make this illusion seem real.
Solar Thermal technologies offer much, much more return per investment dollar, but without the huge profit sucking industries behind it. Still, you do your readers a disservice when this attempt to corral attention and hence, funding toward your own self serving goals. It says that the PV field needs props and grants and cannot sustain on it's own merits. Solar Thermal has sustained on it's own because of the secured returns to investors of hardware, in spite of lack of centralization. It does need education of the masses in the USA who are not aware of the benefits easily inherent in it.
Comment
3 of 7
July 25, 2008
I agree that the Semiconductor industry has a lot to offer the solar industry in this evolution phase.In India , both these industries are yet to fully take off, though there are signs that the semiconductor policy announced by the GOI has triggered a lot of interest in a number of players who are new to these industries.It would indeed be wecome if India can leverage this and become the manufacturing hub for these new age industries.For this , I feel that scale of operations as well growth of the ancillary sectors like chemicals,equipment design & manufacturing etc also needs to be given a thrust.
Comment
4 of 7
July 25, 2008
The trends that are highlighted in the global context is also being seen in developing country like India. For instance, Hyderabad is increasingly emerging as a base for not only the simi conductor but also the solar energy technology industry because of the oblivious linkages between these two segments of industries. The simi conductor industry can play a significant role in commercializing solar energy technologies in a world that is fastly being pushed towards energy crisis.
Comment
5 of 7
July 27, 2008
Thomas - With all due respect, I couldn't disagree more with your points.

First, It is not in the PV industry's interests to continue to rely on government subsidies. It is a fledgling industry that is trying to compete in a marketplace that has been dominated by cheap energy for decades. But, it is clearly apparent that the marketplace is now changing. The real rewards for those in the PV industry will come when it is clear that PV technology offers a cost-competitive advantage over other sources of energy, and the industry can thrive. - Not from the current situation where government subsidies have been necessary to keep it alive.

Second, it is not realistic (nor desirable) to "quit using energy". Of course, we should eliminate waste and strive for efficiency. Even so, the human race will continue to use more and more energy. You can bet on that. And, that need not be a bad thing. Clean energy is abundant all around us in the environment. It is a technological (and political) challenge to harness that energy for our benefit. We need to rise to it. The economic powers of the next century will be those who are the most successful at addressing that challenge.
Comment
6 of 7
July 27, 2008
Sounds like, just another reason for the PV industry, to not lower its prices on PV modules to the end users. To maintain its (PV industry) desire to suckle on the U.S.A. government teet, and to keep the end users reliant on government financial asistance to purchase and install PV modules.
Talk about paying for something out of more than one pocket.
In this respect, the PV industry is no different than the electric power providers than burn coal or utilize atomics to generate electricity.
Get real people. If you want to "save the planet," quite using energy. Put away the wants and desires for more and more or, you could wait to do it and let mother nature clean up behind you. Of course we all know, mother nature is not very discriminate, is she?
Its your choice; buy into the dreams that the wealthy have created for us with their promises of a better future or, re-create the future by living on this Earth the way that was intended from the very beginning.
Comment
7 of 7
July 28, 2008
The main point to remember: "The solar industry and semiconductor industry are intimately connected. Both industries rely on silicon ..."
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Graham Jesmer

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About: I am currently a second year Law Student at Vermont Law School where I work as a Research Associate at the Institute for Energy and the Environment writing and ... more »

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