Posted by DTR Guy in Green Technology News Friday, 27 August 2010 09:30 No Comments
Suntech Power Holdings said Thursday it has run into difficulties making its high-efficiency Pluto solar cells, raising the possibility of a delay in this next-generation technology.
The Chinese solar giant said the problems arose in ramping manufacturing beyond its present monthly pace of 4 MW. As a result, the company said it decided to maintain this relatively modest production level – probably two factory lines – until it works out the technical kinks.
The move is a blow for Suntech as it begins to transition to this key technology and catch more efficient solar developers, particularly mass-market efficiency leader SunPower. It also could be a setback to Suntech’s hope of pushing Pluto beyond it present 19 percent average efficiency to a 20 target. Rumors have percolated in the last two weeks about Pluto problems. One installer told Greentech Media recently that Suntech told them not to expect delivery of Pluto panels until the third quarter or so. Another said Pluto panels have been discussed since late 2007, but not seen.
Suntech pulled back on production goals in 2008 due to the economic collapse, but in 2009 and early 2010 the company remained somewhat optimistic. In March, execs said capacity in Suntech’s plant for Pluto modules would rise to 450 megawatts by the end of the year.Suntech at the time said it would produce around 30 megawatts by the end of the first half and 120 to 150 megawatts in the second half.
On a first quarter conference call with analysts today, Suntech Chief Technology Officer Stuart Wenham described the hang-ups as ” small glitches” common when transferring a new technology to large-scale module production.
” In the course of ramping Pluto production to levels well above the current 4 MW a month, we have identified process control challenges to module production,” Wenham said. He added: ” We have gained a great deal of experience since we began producing commercial quantities of Pluto cells.”
Suntech says it remains pleased with the cell’s performance and claims nothing is wrong with the Pluto design. Yet Pluto’s average cell efficiency remains at 19 percent, with the best yielding cells reaching 19.5 percent. Both are well above the market average of 17.5 percent, but the company first achieved 19 percent efficiency as far back as early 2009.
Suntech is ” fully confident Pluto will become our core product and the industry benchmark for high-performance and cost-effective solar panels,” Wenham says.
The Pluto design is based on the PERL, or passivated emitter with rear locally diffused, technology developed at Australia’s University of New South Wales, where efficiencies of 25 percent have been achieved in the laboratory. It has low reflectivity to capture more sunlight and thinner metal lines to reduce shading.
While the technology remains promising, Suntech said in a difficult to interpret announcement that it recently began a new solar research initiative with the University of New South Wales and Silex Solar to improve the efficiency and cost of cells. The research received a $5 million grant from Australia. The company also kicked off a collaborative effort with Swinburne University of Technology on nanoplasmonic cells. Suntech describes both efforts as complementary to its work with Pluto.
Because of its high efficiency, Pluto commands a premium price in the market and customer demand appears to be high.
Posted by admin in Green Technology Videos Friday, 27 August 2010 09:26 No Comments
See this solar panel system with lights. Inexpensive, easy to install, reduce your power bill. Cheap Solar Power. Cheap Home System. See my part 2 video.
Posted by DTR Guy in Green Technology News Thursday, 26 August 2010 09:30 No Comments
Solexant has raised the first close of a $41.5M Round C from Olympus Capital Partners, DBL Investors, Brichmere Ventures, Trident Capital, Firelake Capital and Medley Partners.
Posted by DTR Guy in Green Technology News Wednesday, 25 August 2010 09:30 No Comments
The CalRENEW-1 Solar Farm in sunny Mendota, California is being dedicated today.
Posted by DTR Guy in Green Technology News Tuesday, 24 August 2010 09:30 No Comments
What makes California’s Silicon Valley unreproducible elsewhere is not its proximity to universities but the entrepreneurial spirit in its DNA.
Posted by admin in Green Technology Videos Monday, 23 August 2010 09:26 No Comments
www.35energy.com Solar power is a very good source of power because it is renewable, environmental friendly and free. It would be a very nice idea to have a solar power system at home. However, due to the high setup cost ($2000 or more), not many people would use this system. I am about to let you in on a little secret that can have you building your own solar panels for home use! By making your own solar power system that will save you thousands! If you think buying a solar power system is too expensive for you, you can make it yourself with a much lower budget. You will need a solar panel first. You will use solar cells, wood plate, soldering iron, solder, flux, and tabbing to make a panel. These items are easy to get from local stores and you would not need any special tool. Even a novice can make it without problem.Solar panels are the wave of the future! So where do we start? How do you get your hands on the material to start building your own solar panels? Well lets first find out what solar panels are. That way you at least sound educated when you pitch this to your family! Solar cells are almost always made from silicon, that is the same material we use to make computer chips. Silicon is one of the worlds most common elements, and is a leading component of sand and many kinds of rocks. A solar cell is built in layers, with two layers of silicon separated by a thin layer of insulating material. All three layers work together and convert sunlight into electricity <b>…</b>
Posted by DTR Guy in Green Technology News Saturday, 21 August 2010 09:30 No Comments
The most effective way to turn information technology green might be as simple as automating it.
That way IT administrators are more likely to use it and organizations more likely to benefit when computers idle down and unnecessary gear is powered off.
” The new trend we’re going to see is to automate,” asserts Nishae Brooks, an award-winning systems administrator at Lone Star College Systems in Texas. ” A lot of the focus has to make (green technology) fairly seamless.”
Green features have long been the focus of technology development. But adoption has been constrained by a lack of awareness and resources as busy IT department race from one job to the next. Easing access to the technology could begin to change this.
Automation has been the defining feature of several recent Lone Star purchases, Brooks says. Included on the shopping list are motion sensors to turn off projectors and duplex printers set to print by default on two sides of a sheet of paper.
The college similarly installed motion sensors on classroom lights and is looking at imposing sleep state policies on its PCs to send them into hibernation when a classroom is vacant – perhaps its greatest departure from past practices.
If the technology is built in, users don’t have to turn it off when they finish or remember to print on two sides, says Brooks. In fact, they have to adjust the printer or computer to do otherwise.
Perhaps the biggest step for the college is its implementation of computer sleep states. The technology is now under study.
Lone Star presently makes use of Intel’s vPro technology in about 55 percent of its 120,000 PCs as well as Symantec’s Endpoint and Altiris management software. Together, they are expected to save $440,000 in energy costs over three years as PCs are remotely turned off at night when they are not in use.
Adopting sleep state policies could enhance this significantly by idling machines during the day, says Brooks. This could be particularly useful with faculty machines, not yet covered by the vPro and Symantec remote shutdown policies. No one wants to switch off the president’s laptop when he is in the middle of a PowerPoint presentation, Brooks said on a conference call discussing her school’s green projects.
She says the technology under consideration could power down PCs three hours or so a day when they are not being use. This will be more valuable in years to come as the school is rapidly expanding its 13 campuses to ease a classroom shortage. Rooms will see less use in the future.
But it also is a technology IT staff had access to in the past. What triggered its adoption is Microsoft’s Windows 7, which made it easier to implement through automation.
” It’s about awareness,” says Brooks. ” I’m sure we had the ability to do some of these things before Windows 7, but we weren’t aware of it.”
When green technologies are built into computer hardware and software, administrators come to understand their benefits quicker, says Clyde Hedrick, product marketing manager at Intel. Then ” it becomes ingrained in their thinking.”