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Archives: solar power

For this week’s entry in the Solar Basics series, we’re revisiting the topic of efficiency. Everyone spanning installers, manufacturers, online commenters and industry experts will stress that efficiency is one of the most important drivers in the solar purchase process. But few resources provide a clear explanation of what efficiency is, how efficiency is calculated and what factors influence efficiency. Today we’ll try and clear up the confusion.

For starters, here’s an informative interview with SunPower Founder and President Emeritus Dick Swanson in which he explains solar panel efficiency and how it benefits homeowners:

Dr. Swanson touches on two key areas that influence the efficiency of solar power systems. First is the rate at which the solar panels convert the energy in sunlight into energy that will power your home. This is basic efficiency. To use a concept that most consumers are familiar with, it’s analogous to fuel efficiency in a vehicle, or that rate at which fuel converts into miles traveled. Just like with a car, a solar panel with high efficiency levels is more favorable (although sunlight is free while gas prices are volatile!).

Second are the barriers to efficiency that residents experience due to the physical location and setup of their homes. Key among these barriers is usable roof space. Certain roof areas might be unsuitable for solar panels due to their size, the direction they face and the ability of the roof to support panels. Sources of shade, especially trees, can also affect usable roof space.

When homeowners compute all these factors, they’re left with a specific tract of their roof that is suitable for solar. In many cases, homeowners want even fewer panels than possible due to cost or aesthetic reasons.  In making the solar purchase decision, it’s in the best interest of any owner to ensure that they can deliver the most energy per square foot of solar panels installed. For space-constrained owners, this ensures they can achieve maximum output. For owners worried about aesthetics, they can generate the same amount of power in a smaller amount of space. Taking into account reliability factors from our last Solar Basics post, highly-efficient and reliable solar power systems allow homeowners to generate the most electricity over the lifetime of their system.

At SunPower, we aim for transparency. On our website, you can find listings of our residential panel offerings and how their efficiency levels stack up against the competition.  Here’s a video detailing how SunPower’s solar power systems are the most efficient in the world:

If you have any additional questions about solar panel efficiency or the efficiency of SunPower products, please post them to our Facebook page or leave them below.

In 1954, Bell Labs pioneered the development of solar power technology, creating solar panels able to provide enough power to support the telephone service to a 1950s farming family. Approximately 56 years later, SunPower, in conjunction with Alcatel-Lucent and ConEdison Development, will install a 1.2 MW ground-mounted solar power system at Bell Labs’ global headquarters in Murray Hill, New Jersey.

Occupying six acres of the 200-acre Bell Labs campus, the SunPower system will generate approximately $2.5 million in cost savings over the next 15 years, which is the equivalent to the amount of energy required to power more than 200 average New Jersey homes on an annual basis.

At SunPower, our president and founder Dr. Richard Swanson has studied up on the early days of the solar industry and is excited about the implications of this installation. Swanson said “SunPower is proud to install this system at Bell Labs, the birthplace of many seminal technologies such as the transistor. Bell Labs is also the birthplace of the first practical solar cell in 1954. Now, 56 years later, solar cells have become one of the fastest growing sources of clean electrical power, so it is fitting that this national treasure is turning to solar cell technology for its power.

Belllabs

Over the years we have found that while more and more people understand that solar energy is a great alternative to fossil fuels, many are still in the dark, so to speak, about solar cell efficiency.

In the following three part video blog series Dr. Richard Swanson, Founder, President and Chief Technical Officer of SunPower, shares some of his solar expertise and discusses the importance of solar panel efficiency. Dr. Swanson is a true solar energy pioneer who developed one of the first high efficiency photovoltaic solar cells to start SunPower 25 years ago.

In this first installment, Dr. Swanson explains solar cell efficiency and how higher efficiency solar panels benefit home owners. In clearing up the questions ‘what is solar cell efficiency and is there a limit to solar efficiency?,’ Dr. Swanson provides the following insight:

"Energy and sunlight are hitting your house in abundance. What we’re trying to do is to take the energy that is in the sunlight and convert it to electrical energy you can use to power your refrigerator and your lights, things like that" If you could turn all of the energy from the sunlight hitting your solar panels into electrical energy, the efficiency ratio would be 100 percent. But you can’t get that much out. The best efficiency you could ever get is 30 percent. SunPower is trying to improve the solar cell to reach that theoretical maximum efficiency of 30 percent. Where does the other 70 percent go? It turns into heat."

Additionally, Dr. Swanson explains how higher efficiency solar panels benefit home owners:

"After accounting for trees, pipes, etc. the typical house has a much smaller amount of useable roof area [for a solar system] than you might think. From that small region, you want to get enough energy to run your whole house " and that requires highly efficient solar cells."

We hope that the interview, filmed at SunPower’s very own Richmond, CA facility, will put you on the path to solar illumination. Let us know if you found this video helpful and what other solar panel efficiency questions you have!

Next week, Dr. Swanson will explain why solar panel efficiency is so important in calculating ROI and the total cost of a solar installation. If you crave some more solar discussion before then, join our community on Facebook at www.facebook.com/sunpower.

Enjoy!

For today’s installment of Solar Basics, we’re going to discuss the importance of system reliability. SunPower solar technology delivers the highest reliability in the industry, so our dealers and salespeople talk a lot about reliability with prospective customers. But for customers who are comparing many different manufacturers at many different price points, they want to know how to measure reliability and why it matters. Those are very fair questions. Here’s one video from SunPower dealer Independent Power Systems of Boulder, CO, which demonstrates one type of reliability:

SUNPOWER HAILSTORM VIDEO:

Solar system reliability is best summed up by three metrics:

1.    The functional lifetime of the panels - All dealers should share the functional lifetime of the panels. This is the number of years the panels are expected to produce power (as set by the manufacturer).

2.     How well the panels perform over their lifetime - Just like a computer processor or a rechargeable battery, solar panel production degrades over time. Some panels maintain higher levels of production over the course of their lifetime.

3.     Energy production continuity - Since solar panels need to face the sun, they are subject to the elements. Over a 25-year lifetime, the panels are exposed to a lot of rainstorms, hailstorms, snowstorms and even the occasional hurricane. All of these factors represent risks that could knock a panel offline. All panels differ on how well they can handle extreme weather and maintain consistent uptime. Be sure to ask your dealer for more details.

Reliability is important when you take into consideration the total cost of ownership over the lifetime of your panels. You are not receiving the full value of your investment whenever your panels aren’t functioning properly. A standard 25-year warranty may not cover you for everything. In addition, imagine having to go through the hassles of dealing with the company to replace the panels and the loss of energy production - and, what if this happened every two years or less? The losses can add up quickly…

To make sure you are investing in a reliable solar energy system, we’d recommend you to get answers to the following questions before you buy:

1.      How much experience does the company have installing and manufacturing solar panels?
2.      How extensively do they test their panels?
3.      What certifications do they have? Do they settle for the industry standard or go beyond it?
4.      How much of the design and manufacturing process does the company control

At SunPower, we take reliability very seriously. Check out this video detailing how we build and test our solar panels to provide the highest level of reliability in the industry:

In late January, SunPower CEO Tom Werner spoke on the ‘Economic Forecast 2011’ panel, an event organized by the San Jose Business Journal. Tom and fellow panelists, including San Jose Mayor Chuck Reed, Sobrato Organization Chairman John Sobrato and PriceWaterhouseCoopers Managing Director Rob Gittings, talked about the current state of their industries and provided their economic outlooks for 2011.

Among the morning’s comments, Tom described how 2010 is the first year of the Solar Decade. Solar is appearing everywhere, on commercial buildings and residential rooftops.

Tom talked about how SunPower is committed to halving the cost of solar over the next five years, making it a viable option for even more households and businesses. This cost reduction will make solar less dependent on incentives and will also allow owners to save more money on their monthly electricity bill.

See below for video of Tom’s comments. Also, check out Tom’s companion article from the San Jose Business Journal which describes the ‘Decade of Solar’ and SunPower’s growing investment in the Silicon Valley economy.

If you have any further questions or comments, please post them to our Facebook page.

SunPower recently announced that a new campus neighborhood at University of California, Davis, called  UC Davis West Village, is combining advanced energy efficient design features with a 4-megawatt (MW), high efficiency SunPower solar system. This project is the product of an innovative public-private partnership between UC Davis and West Village Community Partnership, LLC, a joint venture led by San Francisco-based Carmel Partners with their partner Urban Villages of Denver. Carmel Partners has developed ground-breaking solutions in the design of large-scale sustainable communities, utilizing both onsite renewable energy generation and aggressive energy efficiency measures.  UC Davis already has one of California’s most environmentally conscious campuses, and West Village will be the largest planned Zero Net Energy development in the nation. We are very excited to help UC Davis and Carmel Partners carry their sustainability initiatives to the next level. 
 
Since its founding in 1905, UC Davis has been celebrated for its focus on all things green. But that usually referred to things that grow in the ground, observed through the studies of agriculture, viticulture and enology (the science of wine and wine making). UC Davis now boasts an Office of Environmental Stewardship and Sustainability, with a charter is to make sustainability an integral part of the university’s future. And nowhere is the university’s commitment to planetary kindness more evident than on the construction site of the new UC Davis West Village. The 4MW SunPower system being installed there is expected to provide all of the electricity required by its 2,000 future residents.
 
The planning for West Village actually began a decade ago by UC Davis Energy Efficiency Center. SunPower joined the advisory board in 2006 to help shape and define the project goals. In 2010, SunPower began working with Carmel Partners, the developer selected by the university, to determine the solar requirements for the project and deliver the solar system design and engineering. 
 
West Village is considered ‘high-density housing,’ which means all apartments are consolidated into 3- and 4-story buildings, resulting in a very constrained total roof space on which to install solar panels. So, in addition to installing solar panels on all the available roof space, the SunPower team installed 2MWs of solar on a number of solar carports in the Village parking areas. The high efficiency of SunPower solar panels enabled the developers to meet the system size requirement with fewer parking structures than would be required if conventional solar panels were used. 
 
On the path to achieving “Zero Net Energy,” UC Davis West Village housing and commercial units also feature the following elements to help reduce energy demand and overall carbon footprint: 
 
  • The buildings have been designed to be 50% more energy efficient than is required by California’s rigorous energy code. 
  • West Village site design includes an extensive bike network and several new bus stops to encourage residents to leave their cars at home. 
  • Residents will have SunPower SMS 2.0 monitoring systems to track their energy generation and consumption. 
  • Residential and commercial dwellings feature special electrical outlets displaying the energy consumption of each connected device to combat “phantom power” use. 
 
We hope that seeing SunPower technology as part of the landscape will also encourage residents and business owners to consider renewable energy sources in the future. 
 
The first phase of the project, scheduled for completion this summer, includes more than 300 student apartments, a 15,000-sq.-ft. recreation and amenity facility, and commercial space for retail and university offices. The second and third phases, which will include more apartments, are scheduled for completion over the next two years.  Upon its completion, UC Davis West Village will become a leading example for future residential developments. 
 
On May 19th, California Lieutenant Governor Gavin Newsom and representatives from companies and organizations partnering on the project toured the West Village site. Check out the tour and construction zone photos below.
 
 

Although most of us perceive solar to be more sustainable than conventional sources such as coal or gas, traditional analysis methods rarely consider the full value that solar generation provides. As a result, economically viable solar power generation that achieves apparent parity with conventional energy sources1  – commonly referred to as “grid parity” – can seem an elusive goal. By taking a closer look at all the economic benefits of solar generation, however, it’s clear that grid parity is within reach. 
 
Let’s start by looking at just one of the many hidden benefits of solar generation. Solar power generation often coincides with peak demand periods, providing substantial value by generating power when it’s needed most. Take for example the August 2003 blackout in the Northeast. Not surprisingly, demand for power peaked during the day when temperatures were at their warmest and air conditioners were working their hardest. Solar generation is ideally suited to mitigating these peak conditions as the sun fuels both the heat wave and solar power generation. In this case, as little as 500 MW of solar PV installations dispersed throughout the region could have averted the outage.
 
One reason PV value is largely unrecognized is that it is usually defined solely in terms of the investment return it provides the owner of a system. That leaves out the value solar generation provides to utilities and ratepayers who purchase power, as well as taxpayers who have contributed to the installation of new PV systems via incentives and to society in general. Recently, I undertook the task of analyzing  the value of solar power generation to all constituencies in a particular area – in this case New York State – and demonstrated that solar generation can indeed reach grid parity.
 
So what are these hidden benefits? For utilities and ratepayers, benefits come in the form of reduced costs associated with obtaining power, whether it’s from the wholesale market or through increased power generation capacity needed to meet peak demand. In addition, because PV systems can be spread across a distribution system, power loss through long-distance transmission and wear-and-tear of feeder equipment such as transformers is reduced. PV generation also can act as a price hedge to volatile commodity prices for electricity. 
 
Taxpayers and the society at large also realize tangible benefits. Solar generation improves grid security by reducing the chances of power outages. Going back to the 2003 Northeast blackout example, a $3 billion investment in PV could have prevented the outage, which is estimated to have cost $8 billion. Solar generation also benefits the environment and public health through reduced pollution, and it employs more people than conventional energy production, creating jobs.
 
As Figure 1 shows, by quantifying these benefits for the State of New York, we estimated the combined value of distributed solar generation to the state’s rate and taxpayers to be in the range of 15 to 41 cents per kWh. Since the unsubsidized cost of PV is in the order of 20 to 30 cents in New York, the effective grid parity gap is essentially bridged in this state, and likely in several others as well. This a fundamentally different conclusion than arrived at when applying the traditional grid parity definition without any context, comparing unsubsidized PV to least-cost (gas) generation at 6 to 8 cents/kWh – let alone coal at 4 cents per kWh – and showing a large apparent solar grid parity gap. 
 
Richard Perez Grid Parity
 
Understanding the full value of solar better equips us to support the growth of solar generation. We all stand to gain from a healthier, more sustainable world – economically, environmentally and in terms of energy security.


 
Richard Perez co-authored the paper, “Solar Power Generation in the U.S.: Too Expensive, or a Bargain ?” with Tom Hoff, Founder and President, Research and Consulting at Clean Power Research, and Ken Zweibel, GW Solar Institute, George Washington University. 

1Specifically, apparent grid parity is the point at which unsubsidized solar competes with the cost of new gas generation capacity, sold at wholesale. 

Richard Perez
Richard Perez
Senior Research Associate, University of Albany, Atmospheric Sciences Research Center
Albany, NY, United States

Variability of photovoltaic systems is an important and often misunderstood topic.  SunPower has been a pioneer and leader in efforts to better characterize variability and its impacts, and has helped develop a substantial body of work on the topic.  It has been consistently demonstrated that the variability of a single, relatively small PV system is much greater than that of many distributed PV systems – and that large, utility-scale PV systems demonstrate substantially lower variability than small systems in the same location.  The following article by guest blogger Richard Perez provides an excellent introduction to the topic.  
 
Owners of PV systems know first-hand that passing clouds cause rapid changes in the amount of energy produced from second to second. The impact of this short term power “variability” on system owners is usually seen rather than felt because during times of low production, electricity from the grid picks up the slack. This is good for PV system owners, but makes it difficult for grid operators, who are charged with providing reliable energy for their customers. 
 
One way for utilities to manage variability is to ramp up other power plants, but that increases the costs and complexity of managing the electric power distribution system. Fortunately, recent studies have found that renewable energy sources that are distributed across a wide geographic range greatly reduce the effects of weather-related variability to the overall electric system. This means that more “dispersed” residential and commercial PV is good for utilities. 
 
Electric grid operators became aware of the difficulty variability posed when information about short-term variability in a 3.5-megawatt plant in Springerville, Arizona was widely circulated in 2009. The analysis revealed frequent ramping up and down of the plant’s production as a result of passing clouds. This prompted utilities and agencies across the U.S. to ask themselves: “How would power fluctuations be handled if PV reached a sizeable fraction of power production?” The implication of the Springerville analysis was that short-term fluctuations in power production within a particular region are an obstacle to large-scale PV deployment. 
 
As a result of the Springerville analysis, the questions about short-term variability were taken up by the U.S. Department of Energy and the California Solar Initiative. Unsurprisingly, research confirmed that conditions can be highly variable at any given location. But on the positive side, research also revealed that spreading PV systems out over a larger area mitigates the problems of short-term variability. The truth of this finding is supported by the probability theory’s law of large numbers, and has been proven through recent studies. 
 
The following image illustrates this principle by showing how distance can “smooth” variability. The data in the top part of the figure shows 10-second solar radiation (irradiance) at a single location in Napa, California, on November 21, 2010. The data in the bottom half of the figure presents the same irradiance data, but measured at 25 locations in a 1.5 square mile grid rather than at a single location. The data in the bottom half of the figure is much smoother, without large short-term fluctuations.
 
Richard Perez Irradiance Data

A similar study in New York compared the variability of a single PV system versus a large number of systems deployed over a 25 square mile area. The study found that power output variability of PV systems distributed across a region is similar to the demand-side variability impacts that utilities have experienced for many years. Namely, that a single customer might be quite “noisy,” with local fluctuations caused by the starts and stops of systems and equipment, while the city-wide load experiences almost no short-term fluctuations. In the same way, the power fluctuations at a single PV system location can be substantial, but fluctuations decrease as the footprint of distributed systems increases. 
 
The efforts taken over the last few years to observe, understand and quantify the influence of space and time on PV energy production are making it easier for grid operators to manage short term variability.  These findings, and the introduction of tools to assess the impact of new PV systems on the overall electric grid, support the continued expansion of dispersed residential and commercial PV systems, and the ability for grid operators to get the most from their solar resources. 

For further reading:

Richard Perez co-authored the paper, "Solar Resource Variability: Myth and Fact," published in the September/October 2011 edition of Solar Today, with Tom Hoff, Founder and President, Research and Consulting at Clean Power Research

Richard Perez
Richard Perez
Senior Research Associate, University of Albany, Atmospheric Sciences Research Center
Albany, NY, United States
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