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Thursday, August 28, 2008

Heard at Hot Chips: the hype grows around photovoltaic power generation

Aug 28 2008 5:36PM | Permalink | Email this | Comments (9) |
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In an uncharacteristically non-integrated-circuit keynote topic, the Hot Chips conference this week offered up Dick Swanson, co-founder, president and chief technical officer of SunPower, to give a brief history of the company. Along the way Swanson outlined the technical evolution that brought the company from, more or less literally, the middle of the desert to a rooftop near you, and may well take it back again. And he gave some examples of the kind of numbers-bending hype that is gradually raising suspicions about the entire sector.

In 1985 SunPower spun out of Stanford University, according to Swanson, convinced that silicon wafer-based solar cells could never be competitive on cost and that the future lay with concentrator technology, in which a large amount of light is focused on a relatively small area of high-output photovoltaic structures. The company envisioned that the lower costs of concentrator cells per square meter of collected ambient light would enable vast solar farms in the desert. But a number of things got in the way.

One was a program at the Jet Propulsion Laboratories that drove the cost of wafer-based cells so low that neither concentrators nor the other favorite of the day, thin-film silicon cells, could catch up. The other was the failure of huge solar farms to emerge, perhaps because by the time they were becoming technically feasible, the Reagan administration had slashed federal subsidies to the solar industry, and there was no economic proposition for building large generating capacity so far from the potential load.

So SunPower found itself with a working concentrator technology capable of very high efficiency, but at very high cost. Each time the company just about ran out of money, Swanson related, a project came along. DoD funding carried the company for a while. When that ended, the first private client was Honda, wanting to win a race for solar-powered cars in Australia. They won using SunPower cells, but it was a one-time sale.

Next was the NASA Helios project, a prototype to create solar-powered electric aircraft that could operate at very high altitudes over long periods of time, in effect offering an alternative to low-earth-orbit satellites. Another technical success, another one-time sale, as the project was cancelled after successfully setting a record for the highest altitude reached by a non-rocket-powered aircraft at 100,000 feet.

Swanson then described his door-to-door campaign to get venture funding for the company, all of which failed. Venture capitalists saw no future in photovoltaics. During this time, the company abandoned its attachment to concentrators and began developing high-efficiency wafer-based cells. At last, with literally no alternative left but to lay off the staff, Swanson approached TJ Rodgers of Cypress Semiconductor, who, Swanson said, listened to his pitch and wrote him a personal check for $750,000 on the spot.

Rodgers and Cypress went on to make about $150 million investment in the company, infusing what had been a very academic organization with Cypress's bare-knuckles manufacturing ethos, building a factory, and turning the wafer cell array into a production product. They were rewarded when the company went public at $18 a share—50 percent above the listing price Credit Suisse had insisted on, and closed the day at $27. (As of this writing, the SunPower is quoted at just under $97, down from a 52-week high of $164.49.)

The rest of the story would have been yet another solar start-up, Swanson suggested somewhat facetiously, except for one coincidence. The light-gathering efficiency of the SunPower cell was high enough that its surface appeared black instead of metallic. That aesthetic point, rather than any of the technical parameters, was the swing factor in convincing many home owners to put arrays of the cells on their roofs. And so as point-of-use panels for private homes and businesses suddenly became the killer application for photovoltaic power, SunPower came to dominate that market.

From here, Swanson said, the future is continuous focus on securing more wafer supplies to ease the current shortage, improving efficiency—the company recently claimed to have achieved 23.4 percent—and reducing costs. That last part is pivotal, because to date, Swanson admits, the industry's value proposition for most applications still depends upon substantial government subsidies. "We are making a Faustian bargain," he explained. "Subsidize us for another five years, and by the end of that time we will have reduced the costs enough to eliminate the need for further subsidies."

Of course like Faust, the industry has every hope of escaping their end of the deal on the off chance that the promise doesn't work out. And this optimism sometimes bubbles over into some rather fast and loose computations.

For example, Swanson described the company's frustration that about half of the retail-level cost of a solar rooftop system today is installation cost, not cell cost. This has led the company to explore prefabricated modules, which in turn has led them to reconsider the big farms in the desert. Swanson said that in a demonstration project, SunPower was able to install a farm at such a rate that, in less than the time it takes to construct a nuclear plant, they could have installed the equivalent capacity of cells. This of course neglects the current shortage of wafers. It also appears to bypass in the comparison the fact that the nuclear plant, even based on the sorry operating record of early pressurized-water reactors, would have a much higher duty cycle, and it appears to neglect the dependence of solar cells on weather, angle of incidence, and time of exposure. But the numbers make nice reading.

Swanson made an interesting point in this regard about costs. While for a residential customer the measure of solar cost is parity with grid power—assuming he can sell excess power back to a skeptical utility company—the equation is quite different for a utility company contemplating a large-scale solar farm. There, the question is the marginal cost of other sources of new generating capacity, not parity with the average cost of existing capacity. And Swanson claimed that solar was already, averaged over the estimated 25-year life of the cells, the least expensive source of new capacity.

But that's if you assume substantial increases over the next 25 years in costs for coal, gas, and other alternatives—likely, but far from guaranteed in a subsidy-riddled market. And it also assumes that the utility can actually do something with the power when it's being generated. Solar of course reaches peak generating capacity during a few hours of the day in the summer when the angle of incidence of sunlight on the panels' surface is closest to 90 degrees. Unfortunately, except in a few markets like Phoenix where people tend to run their air conditioners all day every day, that is not the peak demand time for the utilities. People heat a lot of water—and their houses—in the morning, and they turn on the AC and their appliances when they get home from work. If there is a gradual shift to electric vehicles, most of the charging will presumably occur at night, when the solar capacity is zero.

This brings up the question of storage, as one questioner in the Hot Chips audience pointed out. Without substantial cheap, efficient energy storage capacity, solar in many areas just doesn't make sense as a significant proportion of generating capacity, and it cannot be used to offset growth in demand, because it cannot be trusted to be there during the peak load.

Swanson admitted that storage is a very difficult problem, but said that at this point it is simply not needed, with solar even in its poster-child country of Germany only contributing a couple of percent of total generating capacity. He suggested that when solar reached five percent or more—perhaps in 20 years—large-scale storage would be necessary to maintain stability of the electric grid. He did not address how much the lack of storage discounts the value of solar capacity for the utility that must buy the plant, duplicate the capacity, then perhaps watch it sit nearly idle during its peak-generation periods because the added capacity isn't necessary right then.

Addressing other questions from the floor, Swanson dismissed suggestions that photovoltaics never produce as much energy as was required to manufacture them. He traced this idea to a 1975 Scientific American article that, he said, might have been accurate at the time, but had been rendered obsolete by continued improvements in wafer manufacturing. Without giving any specifics on his analysis, he said that SunPower believes the energy break-even point is now about two years—this mostly dominated by the energy required to manufacture the wafers. In response to another question, he said that the best available data on cell useful life comes from a 30-year-old installation at California's Rancho Seco, which is still running, and the cells are "just fine. So a 25-year operating life is conservative."

Actually, according to the owner's Web site, the first portion of the Rancho Seco installation was put in place in 1984, which would have been less than 25 years ago. Many of the panels have been added since. Swanson did say that the known failure modes on the panels include failure of the encapsulation, solarization of the glass, browning of the plastic, and simple failure of solder joints.

Swanson makes a strong case for continued optimism about photovoltaic energy generation. But in the growing tendency to paint the benefits of the technology with a very broad brush, painting over important parts of the analysis, the industry is beginning to sound a great deal like a certain Internet industry of not that long ago, which never really got around to explaining how a business with no profit model could make it up on scale. When it starts sounding too good to be true ...


Related entries in: Business and Marketing | Environmental Compliance | Power Sources/Controllers | 


Reader Comments


at 8/28/2008 7:22:04 PM, Meredith Poor said:
The solar power comparison is not as simple as rooftop vs. utility. Solar power is practical far closer to the point of load than practically any other gathering or transmission technology (as opposed to storage, such as batteries). You can go to a lot of expense to run wires from a power station to a house and then to a light fixture, or you can simply put solar panels on the light. Even when accounting for billions of lights, emerging technology tends to favor a combination of panels and lights over a distribution network. Same goes for radios and televisions, laptop computers, cell phones, and clocks. ~~~~~~~~~~~~ There are two strategies for solar powering cars: if one has a plug-in hybrid, use the solar panel to contribute to the total power supply. For a pure electric car, have three of them, and leave two basking in the sun while the third one is driven around. These would be, presumably, cheap cars, but there''s no technical barrier to this approach. ~~~~~~~~~~~~ This leaves air conditioners/heat pumps, water heaters, ovens, dish washers, and dryers: equipment that consumes in kilowatt quantities. Water heaters, ovens, and clothes dryers, and even dishwashers could be redesigned to use concentrating solar power as a heat source. The PV component would be sufficent to power motors and embedded controllers. After those are taken care of, about all that''s left is air conditioners, and to a smaller extent, clothes washers. A clothes washer isn''t used much, so a large battery charged slowly might do the trick. What''s left then is the air conditioner. ~~~~~~~~~~~~ Using buffering (say cooling water at night to be a heat sink for heat radiated from a condenser during the day) could help limit power draw. Other approaches might include movable sunscreens that act to block incoming light from windows. This, again, returns to substituding brute force with embedded controllers that act preemtively. Even better if the solar panels themseves do double duty as solar screens. ~~~~~~~~~~~~ Putting a collection of solar panels in fixed positions on a roof of a house has other problems, namely that most people like trees in their yards. The installation issues diminish when they are put on local big box retail stores and strip center parking lots. In this case the size of the installation, and simplicity of maintenance access, should help reduce the cost. This, however, only applys to that part of the capture that isn''t fixed directly on the appliance.

at 8/28/2008 8:48:40 PM, FP said:
The problem we are really referring to when we criticize the "intermittency" of renewable resources, is the challenge to balance production and consumption on a real time basis. This is difficult with conventional sources of energy, too, as consumption varies from day to day, depending on weather and other factors. Coal and nuclear are "baseload power plants", meaning their output cannot be varied fast enough to respond to changes in consumption. Utilities have already developed ways to deal with this issue, mainly, through the use of "peaker plants" which generally run on natural gas. Natural gas plants are cheap to build, but the fuel they use is expensive. So these plants are only fired up when they are needed. We already have an infrastructure of peaker plants that we can use when the sun doesn''t shine or the wind doesn''t blow. Over time, natural gas can be replaced by biomass, which would have very similar advantages and synergies with wind/solar. Another point: Plug-in hybrids don''t have to charge at night. They can charge during the day while the car is parked in front of your office either from a charging station or from a solar roof top.

at 8/29/2008 1:41:25 PM, John said:
First...in 20 years when solar reaches 5%.... a long time to work on storage issue... Second... there is the issue of typical usage in the house, right now people are urged to save power by adjusting thermostats up or down Why? if the power is available during the day.. use it. let the thermal mass of the house continue to hold for the temperature for the next 12 hours ... effectively "storing" power. Third.. solar / wind should be viewed as "negative loads" ...not replacements for power generation. We have a lot of power infrastructure and it can go a long way, if we don't waste it.

at 8/29/2008 1:54:37 PM, Bluebear said:
On renewable energy issue, the U.S. has done a very poor job. It is a fact that solar is the only externally injected energy to this isolated Earth that human can count on for distance future survival. All other energy sources either are nonrenewable or impact the ecosystem in some way irreversible. Solar panel is but one of the ways to harvest solar energy. Hydropower, windmills, and all kinds of bio fuel are indirect forms of solar energy. This issue is a global one that the U.S., with its ambition of influencing politics of other countries, should take leadership. Windmills from Denmark or solar panels from Germany indicated that the U.S. has not done its share. Left alone, except for niche applications, the mass volume sector of solar panel industry is still far from being able to compete economically with other means to generate and distribute electricity, and, unlike the commercialization of the Internet, will have no choice other than going bankrupt after some resonation of hypes. Tax incentives for local power companies to subsidize solar panel installations and the going-away direct rebate of $2000 per installation from U.S. Federal government seemed like responses to lobbyists and PR moves to gain popularity, but are very inefficient ways to help solar technologies to be self-sufficient: Only a small fraction of the tax payers’ solar installation subsidy money really travel upstream to the PV panel R&D lab. It may help to levy “resource depleting” surcharge on big oil companies and use that funding to support solar development and worldwide implementation. This move needs to be global so big oils cannot migrate accounting rooms to different countries to avoid paying back to Earth what they depleted to make the profits. Efforts should be more than advancing PV, something such as building hydropower plants on rivers wherever feasible in poor countries so that they can reduce their consumption of nonrenewable fuels, should have immediate net payback.

at 8/29/2008 4:51:15 PM, Markus Unread said:
When I look around Silicon Valley in the summer time (you know, the time you are most likely to have a power shortage) I just keep thinking of the solar parking-lot/rooftop idea. All these cars baking in the sun, that people will be running their AC to cool off, and all that nice blacktop acting as a passive solar heat collector. And the office buildings... Go up on the roof of any large office building and look at the scale of the power being used to air-condition it. While you are up there, check the heating unit - I''ll bet that it''s running as well. Why? Because many buildings, especially leased buildings, aren''t maintained well and the old pneumatic control systems are borked. Conservation hasn''t meant enough in the past. There are lots of places to save. How many computers are left on 24/7? How many don''t even have monitor/HDU standby enabled? Hydro should be a high priority around the world. It can be designed to be fish-friendly (fish ladders and flow regulation). Assuming higher overall temperatures and falling snow pack, hydro and water storage will be a critical infrastructure priority. Right now the snow melts early, causing flooding and then drought. Yes, the deployment is costly, but unlike many other technologies, once it is running it has very low overhead - and it''s fast response!

at 8/30/2008 3:36:20 PM, j said:
high fuel prices will help to bring new technology. we've just been very lazy when energy is cheap, and relied on naughty adventures to secure sources.

at 8/30/2008 7:44:45 PM, DVanditmars said:
From what I have read on this subject, the killer app for solar-power is cooling a building.

at 9/2/2008 11:32:22 AM, Alan said:
Propane refrigerators use a flame for cooling. Will someone please tell me why we don't use concentrated sunlight to run the ammonia cycle for refrigeration (of both food & buildings).

at 9/2/2008 4:50:51 PM, Bluebear said:
Allan: I agree that you’ve got a good case to be taken to the Congress: Why has sunlight refrigerator got no subsidy to challenge its less costly, but less green, competitors? Technically I can’t see why a large area of focused sunlight could not be the heat source instead of a profane flame for the serial-cycle aqua ammonia profane refrigerator. The big hurdle may be the cost to acquire and the space to mount the glasses to accomplish a useful level of intensified boiling. The concurrent-cycle profane refrigerator, on the other hand, seems not suitable for sunlight heating because it requires a continuation of moderate heat injection to maintain correct ranges of partial pressures. I imagine reliability and maintenance cost would also be a concern if a refrigerator became too large to be disposable. With heat and time it should be a mess inside the steel pipes of an aqua ammonia machine, but it will always be pristine clean inside the steel pipes of a hydrous ammonia compressor system, unless air gets in with time when the evaporator side is pulled below ambient pressure for cryogenic cases--in such a case the heat-pump efficiency drop is easily noticeable and water and air purging vents are easy to be designed in. by the way, it may be another practical idea for the RV Industry to make a subsidy case to augment the RV to let its engine coolant heat up the aqua ammonia tank of a serial-cycle to precharge the refrigerator on board before the vehicle reaches a camp ground.

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