Solar now Germany's #1 source of electricity

mentalfloss

Prickly Curmudgeon Smiter
Jun 28, 2010
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UK and Germany break solar power records

Britain and Germany have broken records for generating solar electricity in the last few weeks, according to new industry figures.

Germany generated over half its electricity demand from solar for the first time ever on 9 June, and the UK, basking in the sunniest weather of summer during the longest days of the year, nearly doubled its 2013 peak solar power output at the solstice weekend.

France, Italy, Denmark and other countries are also believed to have generated record amounts in June.

According to UK trade body the Solar Trade association (STA), the total UK installed solar capacity generated from homes, buildings and solar farms is now about 4.7 gigawatts compared to 2.7GW in July last year.

It is not possible to tell exactly how much solar power was generated in Britain because electricity from small-scale household units is not centrally measured, but the STA estimated on Monday that 3.9% of the UK's electricity demand was met by solar photovoltaic systems (PV) over the 24 hours of Saturday.

This means solar's contribution peaked at a record 7.8% of daytime electricity, on 21 June, said the association.

"Britain has virtually doubled its capacity in the last year, with 80,000 more installations, including several thousand larger scale commercial ones," said Ray Noble, a consultant at the UK National Solar Centre.

"There are now 530,000 installations in the UK, of which 510,000 are domestic small scale ones. Last weekend we estimate they generated about 8% of daytime electricity in total," said Noble.

"We think that this is likely to double again within a year. There is nothing to stop it getting to 30-40% of UK electricity at this time of year," he said.

The figures were welcomed by UK energy minister Greg Barker, who was criticised in May for removing subsidies for large-scale solar farms. "We have put ourselves among the world leaders on solar and this ambitious strategy will place us right at the cutting edge.

"There is massive potential to turn our large buildings into power stations and we must seize the opportunity this offers to boost our economy as part of our long term economic plan.

"Solar not only benefits the environment, it will see British job creation and deliver the clean and reliable energy supplies that the country needs at the lowest possible cost to consumers."

Germany, with 1.4m PV systems, generated a peak of 23.1GW hours at lunchtime on Monday 9 June, equivalent to 50.6% of its total electricity need. According to government development agency Germany trade and invest (GTAI), solar power grew 34% in the first five months of 2014 compared to last year.

Europe added 10.9GW of PV capacity in 2013, said the European photovoltaic industry association (Epia), bringing the total installed capacity to over 81GW on the continent.

"This represents a 16% increase compared to the year before and about 59% of the world's cumulative photovoltaic capacity," said a spokesman. "2013 was a record year for the UK, with 1.5GW installed last year. Germany installed 3.3GW, Italy 1.4GW, Romania 1.1GW and Greece 1.04GW."

But new figures from the Washington-based Earth Policy Institute suggest Europe is no longer the biggest market for solar power.

In 2013, says the EPI report, China added "at least" 11.3GW and is now the second largest generator of solar power after Germany, and the US added some 4.8GW, increasing its total capacity by 65% to 12GW.

"PV remains the most rapidly-growing energy technology by a wide margin. Indeed, global PV installations for 2014 should reach at least 40,000 megawatts, expanding world PV capacity by another 30 percent," says author J Matthew Roney.

California now has more than 240,000 small-scale solar installations on commercial and residential roofs across the state that amount to more than 2,200 MW of generation capacity.

The US figure was greatly augmented by 25 new large-scale solar projects including the largest solar plant in the world in the Mojave desert 40 miles southwest of Las Vegas.

According to the European photovoltaic industry report, solar power is expected to grow 20% a year over the next few years.

UK and Germany break solar power records | Environment | theguardian.com
 

taxslave

Hall of Fame Member
Nov 25, 2008
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I'm sure there is a way to store it or a viable alternative during off peak seasons.



What percentage if their energy source is coal?

Coal is a viable alternative and much more reliable.
How do you dispose of the dead pannels? Whenever ours burn ot they must go to the landfill which is no longer a fill but a hill in the making.
 

mentalfloss

Prickly Curmudgeon Smiter
Jun 28, 2010
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Zipperfish

House Member
Apr 12, 2013
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I can't really fathom people that prefer coal to solar energy.

Actually coal is great for BC. You can't just turn off a coal-fired generating plant, so they produce power even when it isn't really needed. So BC lets the dams fill up at night while we buy power dirt cheap from Alberta. then we let the water through the turbines at peak (read: expensive) power demand and sell it back to Alberta. Even though BC is a net energy importer, we make money.

Go coal! ha ha ha

Here's a neat idea--solar roadways:

Crowdfunding campaign raises $2.2M to build solar roadways]

Solar Roadways' crowdfunding campaign, which closed on Monday, raised $2.2 million — more than double what Brusaw was seeking — in just two months. The campaign, the most popular in Indiegogo's history, attracted more than 48,000 backers from all 50
states and 165 countries
 

petros

The Central Scrutinizer
Nov 21, 2008
109,378
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Low Earth Orbit
I can't really fathom people that prefer coal to solar energy.
What is giving you grief?

The reason? They are called mega and gigawatts available 24/7/365. Industry can't run without 24/7/365 mega and gigawatts.

No energy = poverty.
 

Zipperfish

House Member
Apr 12, 2013
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Vancouver
What is giving you grief?

The reason? They are called mega and gigawatts available 24/7/365. Industry can't run without 24/7/365 mega and gigawatts.

No energy = poverty.

Not energy...coal. Like folks going on about what a blight wind turbines are on the eyes. What, are coal plants epitomes of aesthetic beauty? Or solar cells creating future waste streams--is anyone under the impression that there is no waste products from coal combustion?
 

mentalfloss

Prickly Curmudgeon Smiter
Jun 28, 2010
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The solar roadway thing is getting some serious flak from a lot of skeptics.

You need to watch the original promotional video and then thunderf00t's critique on the tubes.
 

petros

The Central Scrutinizer
Nov 21, 2008
109,378
11,436
113
Low Earth Orbit
Not energy...coal. Like folks going on about what a blight wind turbines are on the eyes. What, are coal plants epitomes of aesthetic beauty? Or solar cells creating future waste streams--is anyone under the impression that there is no waste products from coal combustion?
Maybe everyone doesn't have their heads in the clouds? Maybe they prefer having industry with shiny new carbon capture coal power stations? Maybe CO2 is worth good money as a solvent? Maybe they plan on offsetting solar costs and shortfalls with carbon?

Who uses this solvent? Oil companies to extract more oil.