by waegari » Mon 24 Dec 2007, 13:11:14
$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('HydroLuver', ' ')
The current trend is towards cheaper thin film solar panels. They use 99% less silicon than the type of solar panels you are referring to. Read about what some of these companies are doing.
First Solar, NanoSolar, Energy Conversion Devices, etc.
They may have other issues, but silicon is not one of them.
Sure, thin film is all the rage nowadays. News editors know that. But that's not what I mean by 'sustainable'. Here's one of its 'issues': Manufacture of thin film solar panels requires copper, indium, gallium and selenide.
Now let's take indium. As our friend
Wiki puts it:
$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('', 'I')t is estimated that, at current consumption rates, there is only 13 years' supply of indium left.
, which seems to based on a New Scientist report, as of 26 May 2007.
Don't forget: indium also goes into flat panel displays (tv, computer). High demand in that sector.
Which leads to
$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('', 'T')he Earth is estimated to contain about 0.1 ppm of indium which means it is about as abundant as silver. However, bullish supply-demand fundamentals have propelled the price from US$70/kg in 2001 to over US$1,000/kg today.
Metalspace, 8 June 2007And then it also requires copper, which too seems to have been in short supply lately..
Here's today's latest news in this field:
$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('', 'C')opper in Shanghai rose by the exchange-imposed daily limit for a second day as stockpiles in China slumped to a 10-month low, signaling that the world's biggest consumer of the metal may need to step up buying.
Shanghai copper stockpiles fell 2.5 percent to 25,722 metric tons last week, the lowest since Feb. 1, the exchange said Dec. 21. London Metal Exchange copper, not trading today, jumped 4.1 percent to $6,795 a ton after the inventory report.
``There has been good physical buying in recent weeks and there might be a bit of stockpiling by consumers,'' Li Rong, chief metal analyst at Great Wall Futures Co., said by phone. ``Some people are worried there might not be enough metal.''
This means: thin film solar will only get more expensive in the long run, and if the prediction about indium holds water, it may never flourish at all, at least in this chemical make up.
So it seems to boil down to a choice between a flat panel television or computer and thin film solar. Or none of either.