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Think CIGS 2.0: The New Thin-Film Economy

By Michael Bartholomeusz, AQT
November 5, 2009   |   5 Comments

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5 Reader Comments
Comment
1 of 5
November 6, 2009
Will be interesting to see what happens to the cost of materials as this really scales up in 5 years.

These are lofty expected efficiencies -almost high enough for residential. I wonder if that will ever happen.
Comment
2 of 5
November 8, 2009
RAJASTHAN A PREFEERED DESTINATION FOR SOLAR ENERGY BASED POWER GENERATION
Middle East is synonymous with oil, a resource that transformed those nations into wealthiest, Rajasthan has oil and yearly average DNI 2250 kwh / m2.
I believe the Sun in Rajasthan is the gateway to prosperity as it has optimum solar radiation in the country, cheap land in abundance, power evacuation system in place in Solar Zone, and consistent growing power demand.
850 MW capacity builtup in wind speaks of clean energy development and confirms availability of dynamic market potential, tax holidays,incentive support, easier FDI rules, political willingness and long term cost-competitiveness for solar industry to take off in a big way.
The state thus becomes a preferred destination for development of large scale grid parity solar energy projects on affordable cost.
Every one is aware that high capital cost, lack of expertise in solar energy potential estimation and ignorance in utilizing cheap resources, local talented engineering skills and resistance in deployment of cost cutting measures in BOS had been the road blocks for affordable solar energy based generation to happen so far.
In the process of expanding solar market I keep thinking for a road map for the existing solar technologies deploying cost cutting measures and bring down the capital cost at a level so that an investment cost of Rs. 50-60 Million yields 2.5 million units/ year.
As capital cost in PV is south diving and in case Companies source out mounting structures, fittings hardware, power block equipments indigenously and start installation themselves, I am confident of sustainable, long-term growth for this type of scale of solar energy development in Rajasthan. It appears to come true in near time now, market for all Solar Technologies is definite to grow multifold in the next 5 -10 years.
For more details and facts, access
Solarenergyinindia.blogspot.com and solarwindbiomasscoalandgasenergy.blogspot.com
Comment
3 of 5
November 9, 2009
The so-called debate about which technology will "win" is misdirected. Crystalline silicon and thin film (of any chemical composition) are two different technologies and are perhaps best suited to different applications. Roof panels are not the only possible form of Building Integrated PV. Applications of transparent thin film in architectural glazing would allow the entire building to act as a solar collector, making the efficiency of the thin film much less of an issue. Any radiation captured and converted to electricity is also not adding to the heat load, which starts a positive chain of effects. The use of PV glazing also leaves the roof free for planting to filter rainwater for use in plumbing. This would go a long way toward creating Zero-Energy buildings with current technology. By making the entire surface work for good instead of evil, our buildings can be part of a healthy environment.

Anne Elliott Merica
IntegratedFraming.com
Comment
4 of 5
November 10, 2009
Solvinti, LLC is an authorzied agent which sells complete "turn-key" CIGS production line (25MW - 150MW). There are several factors impacting CIGS and aSi Thin Film technology. The most significant is the lowering cost and increased efficiency of Poly-Si modules. The original CIGS ROI was built upon Poly-Si costs of >$3.50/watt; now we are below $1.95/watt. The second is the "black eye" CIGS has received from the investment community; new CIGS companies in the US (TX & CA) have "spent" over $500-million to develop CIGS (even though they could have purchased a commercially available technology). The true value of CIGS is not just the cost/watt; but the consistant Power Output from the panels, regardless of the Sun's position. As more of our plants are built, I see CIGS taking significant marketshare from aSi Think Film; but sharing the Global Market with high-energy, high-efficiency and low-cost Poly Si panels. (info@solvinti.com).

Thank you,

James Molinaro
President
Solvinti, LLC
Comment
5 of 5
November 11, 2009
"CIGS does not have [...] the raw material availability issues associated with tellurium [...]."

Really? In 2008, less than 600 metric tonnes of indium and less than 100 metric tonnes of gallium were mined worldwide. Production of these elements comes as a by-product of aluminum and zinc mining - i.e. there are no indium or gallium mines.

Granted, CIGS uses thin films of these materials, but this still sounds like a significant "material availability issue" to me...
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