Sunday March 14 , 2010

Our Solar Future: A European View

The Phoenix Sun

Short URL for this article: http://is.gd/8TScS

SunbeltSpeaking earlier today at a press conference in Copenhagen, the head of the main European photovoltaic (PV) industry organization made the case for PV as a fundamental solution to climate change.

“The problem is global,” said Adel El Gammal, “and PV can bring a global solution.”

El Gammal, secretary general of the European Photovoltaic Industry Association (EPIA) since 2008, pointed to PV’s major pluses.  His key points included:

  • Solar energy is massively available.

  • PV can provide distributed electrical generation (as well as centralized).

  • It’s a scalable technology, from a few watts to MWs.

  • PV can ramp up production very quickly

  • It is one of the only technologies that be easily integrated into a dense urban setting.

The potential for solar energy is not just theoretical, he added. In the last year alone, El Gammal said, PV accounted for nearly 20% of all new electrical generation in Europe — some 4.7 GW.

Solar in the “Sunbelt Countries”

In the developing world, El Gammal sees an even larger role for solar PV.

The land between 35°N latitude and 35°S is sometimes referred to as the Sunbelt Countries, for reasons that are obvious after glancing at the map to the right, showing the amount of solar energy falling on the planet.

“Sunbelt countries contain 75% of the world’s population,” said El Gammal, “and are also the fastest growing populations.”

Many of the sunbelt countries have a poor electrical infrastructure — with many as 1.6 billion people living with access to electricity. And where electricity is available it is generated primarily by fossil fuels and at a higher cost than elsewhere.

“PV is a perfect solution to match increasing electrical demand” in sunbelt countries, said El Gammal. It is already competitive with peak load generation and, he added, in two to three years, PV will be competitive with medium load generation.

These projections come from several studies commissioned by the EPIA, primarily the report SET for 2020, published in June of this year. That study takes its name, and its mission from the European Union’s climate and energy policies goals adopted in 2007. These include the so-called 20/20/20 goals:

  • Reduce greenhouse-gas emissions unilaterally by 20% from 1990 levels;

  • Ensure that renewable energy represents a 20% share of total energy use;

  • Reduce overall energy consumption by 20%.

By combining a number of best-case scenarios, the EPIA claims that PV can provide more than half of the EU target for renewable energy, moving from 1% of all electrical generation today to up to 12% by 2020.

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The Phoenix Sun

The Phoenix Sun covers solar power from Phoenix, Arizona – the sunniest major city in the nation. In addition to reporting on innovations in solar technology, green job growth and advice for homeowners who want to go solar, the Sun investigates stories you won’t find elsewhere. We cover the legal, political and regulatory framework that has kept the US solar power industry far behind competitors in Europe and Asia. And we track the potential for a solar surge today and tomorrow. The sun is edited by investigative reporter Osha Gray Davidson who has covered the environment and politics for 25 years, writing for Mother Jones, Rolling Stone, the New York Times, and other national and international publications.

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