| Topic: |
Politics > Politics-USA |
| User: |
"Captain Compassion" |
| Date: |
08 Aug 2007 03:00:52 PM |
| Object: |
Sde Boker makes solar energy viable |
Sde Boker makes solar energy viable
By Ofri Ilani
http://www.haaretz.com/hasen/spages/890970.html
The afternoon Negev sun shone brightly on the solar panels at the
National Center for Solar Energy near Sde Boker. The center's
director, physicist Prof. David Feiman, squinted into the light.
"After 30 years of research on solar energy, my life's work of
experiments in how to produce electricity from the sun, I can say this
year that I know how to manufacture solar energy that will compete
with conventional energy," he says.
A few months ago, the center's scientists managed to develop a new
technology of solar, or photovoltaic cells, that Feiman says will make
the production of solar energy so efficient that the cost of the
photovoltaic cells that convert solar energy into electricity will be
negligible.
In an ordinary solar panel of the type in use today, the silicon that
makes up the cells is very expensive, making it a costly product.
According to Feiman, photovoltaic cells carry out two functions:
First, they change the light into electricity, their essential task;
second, they store the light.
"The principle is to focus the light using little material," Feiman
says. "We constructed a large, parabola-shaped glass plate. It not
only absorbs the light, it also focuses it on one point, a thousand
times more than regular sunlight."
According to Feiman, "an ordinary photovoltaic cell, which is 10 by 10
centimeters, normally produces one watt of electricity. We managed to
extract more than a thousand times more - 1,500 watts. In this way,
the cost of a cell is 1,500 less, becoming almost nothing."
"No one has ever produced so much electricity from a solar cell at
this strength," he says.
The Solar Energy Center is now collaborating with an Israeli start-up
company, Zenith Solar, to create a home system of solar cells based on
this technology within about a year. "What is good for the home is
also good for the country," Feiman says.
Israeli solar energy technology is already used extensively in power
stations throughout the world. At the center at Sde Boker, which
belongs to the Jacob Blaustein Institutes for Desert Research of
Ben-Gurion University of the Negev, two solar panels are installed,
each one about 100 meters long, moving in synch with the sun. An oil
pipe is at the center. The panels, built by Sollel, a Beit Shemesh
company, are not based on photovoltaic cells, but rather focus the
light on the pipe, causing it to heat up. Heat produced by panels of
this type turn into steam, which moves turbines.
Last month, Sollel signed a contract with the U.S. company PG&E, to
build the largest power station in the world, in the Mojave desert in
California, which will have about 7,000 such panels and will cover
about 14 square kilometers. It is due to go into service in about four
years, providing 553 megawatts of electricity.
The British-born Feiman has lived at Midreshet Sde Boker since 1976,
when he began researching solar energy. A world expert in the field,
he says the economic model he has built will allow a significant part
of Israel's energy to go solar within the decade.
"We're paying about 10 cents per kilowatt/hour. If the government
taxes the Electric Corporation one cent per kilowatt/hour, it will
amount to about a half billion dollars a year. In a decade, we won't
need any outside funding. If we want to solve Israel's energy
problems, we should stop building conventional power stations and
build a solar power station every year of one gigawatt - equal to two
of the type of station Sollel is building in California."
The National Infrastructure Ministry said it would "soon be
determining electricity rates for home photovoltaic systems. At
present, the parties are working on removing obstacles that have to do
with land use."
--
There may come a time when the CO2 police will wander the earth telling
the poor and the dispossed how many dung chips they can put on their
cook fires. -- Captain Compassion.
Wherever I go it will be well with me, for it was well with me here, not
on account of the place, but of my judgments which I shall carry away
with me, for no one can deprive me of these; on the contrary, they alone
are my property, and cannot be taken away, and to possess them suffices
me wherever I am or whatever I do. -- EPICTETUS
Joseph R. Darancette
daranc@NOSPAMcharter.net
.
|
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| User: "Scotius Ponti Fickatur" |
|
| Title: Re: Sde Boker makes solar energy viable |
14 Sep 2007 08:11:25 PM |
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On Wed, 08 Aug 2007 13:00:52 -0700, Captain Compassion
<daranc@NOSPAMcharter.net> wrote:
Sde Boker makes solar energy viable
By Ofri Ilani
http://www.haaretz.com/hasen/spages/890970.html
The afternoon Negev sun shone brightly on the solar panels at the
National Center for Solar Energy near Sde Boker. The center's
director, physicist Prof. David Feiman, squinted into the light.
"After 30 years of research on solar energy, my life's work of
experiments in how to produce electricity from the sun, I can say this
year that I know how to manufacture solar energy that will compete
with conventional energy," he says.
A few months ago, the center's scientists managed to develop a new
technology of solar, or photovoltaic cells, that Feiman says will make
the production of solar energy so efficient that the cost of the
photovoltaic cells that convert solar energy into electricity will be
negligible.
In an ordinary solar panel of the type in use today, the silicon that
makes up the cells is very expensive, making it a costly product.
According to Feiman, photovoltaic cells carry out two functions:
First, they change the light into electricity, their essential task;
second, they store the light.
"The principle is to focus the light using little material," Feiman
says. "We constructed a large, parabola-shaped glass plate. It not
only absorbs the light, it also focuses it on one point, a thousand
times more than regular sunlight."
According to Feiman, "an ordinary photovoltaic cell, which is 10 by 10
centimeters, normally produces one watt of electricity. We managed to
extract more than a thousand times more - 1,500 watts. In this way,
the cost of a cell is 1,500 less, becoming almost nothing."
"No one has ever produced so much electricity from a solar cell at
this strength," he says.
The Solar Energy Center is now collaborating with an Israeli start-up
company, Zenith Solar, to create a home system of solar cells based on
this technology within about a year. "What is good for the home is
also good for the country," Feiman says.
Israeli solar energy technology is already used extensively in power
stations throughout the world. At the center at Sde Boker, which
belongs to the Jacob Blaustein Institutes for Desert Research of
Ben-Gurion University of the Negev, two solar panels are installed,
each one about 100 meters long, moving in synch with the sun. An oil
pipe is at the center. The panels, built by Sollel, a Beit Shemesh
company, are not based on photovoltaic cells, but rather focus the
light on the pipe, causing it to heat up. Heat produced by panels of
this type turn into steam, which moves turbines.
Last month, Sollel signed a contract with the U.S. company PG&E, to
build the largest power station in the world, in the Mojave desert in
California, which will have about 7,000 such panels and will cover
about 14 square kilometers. It is due to go into service in about four
years, providing 553 megawatts of electricity.
The British-born Feiman has lived at Midreshet Sde Boker since 1976,
when he began researching solar energy. A world expert in the field,
he says the economic model he has built will allow a significant part
of Israel's energy to go solar within the decade.
"We're paying about 10 cents per kilowatt/hour. If the government
taxes the Electric Corporation one cent per kilowatt/hour, it will
amount to about a half billion dollars a year. In a decade, we won't
need any outside funding. If we want to solve Israel's energy
problems, we should stop building conventional power stations and
build a solar power station every year of one gigawatt - equal to two
of the type of station Sollel is building in California."
The National Infrastructure Ministry said it would "soon be
determining electricity rates for home photovoltaic systems. At
present, the parties are working on removing obstacles that have to do
with land use."
I can tell you without a doubt that while it may make sense
for Israel to go to a lot of photovoltaic usage, they have a VERY
sunny climate. You wouldn't get a return on investment for 10,000
years if you lived in Seattle. I'm all for energy schemes that work,
but we have to bear in mind the differences between climatic
conditions, etc.
.
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| User: "Adam Whyte-Settlar none@none" |
|
| Title: Re: Sde Boker makes solar energy viable |
16 Sep 2007 11:24:12 AM |
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"Scotius (Ponti Fickatur)" <wolvzbud@mnsi.net> wrote in message
news:hpbme398ve05a26fi2j31umr3kcdt9snts@4ax.com...
I can tell you without a doubt that while it may make sense
for Israel to go to a lot of photovoltaic usage, they have a VERY
sunny climate. You wouldn't get a return on investment for 10,000
years if you lived in Seattle. I'm all for energy schemes that work,
but we have to bear in mind the differences between climatic
conditions, etc.
It would work just fine in Seattle
Each day in Seattle, on average, enough raw solar energy falls on a typical
residential 40 x 100 foot lot to power 50 homes.
And that's using the old technology. The main problem has always been the
cost not the amount of light.
If this system really is 1000 times more efficient, or even just ten times
as efficient.. well.. figure it out for yourself.
.
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| User: "Captain Compassion" |
|
| Title: Re: Sde Boker makes solar energy viable |
14 Sep 2007 11:51:45 PM |
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On Fri, 14 Sep 2007 21:11:25 -0400, "Scotius (Ponti Fickatur)"
<wolvzbud@mnsi.net> wrote:
On Wed, 08 Aug 2007 13:00:52 -0700, Captain Compassion
<daranc@NOSPAMcharter.net> wrote:
Sde Boker makes solar energy viable
By Ofri Ilani
http://www.haaretz.com/hasen/spages/890970.html
The afternoon Negev sun shone brightly on the solar panels at the
National Center for Solar Energy near Sde Boker. The center's
director, physicist Prof. David Feiman, squinted into the light.
"After 30 years of research on solar energy, my life's work of
experiments in how to produce electricity from the sun, I can say this
year that I know how to manufacture solar energy that will compete
with conventional energy," he says.
A few months ago, the center's scientists managed to develop a new
technology of solar, or photovoltaic cells, that Feiman says will make
the production of solar energy so efficient that the cost of the
photovoltaic cells that convert solar energy into electricity will be
negligible.
In an ordinary solar panel of the type in use today, the silicon that
makes up the cells is very expensive, making it a costly product.
According to Feiman, photovoltaic cells carry out two functions:
First, they change the light into electricity, their essential task;
second, they store the light.
"The principle is to focus the light using little material," Feiman
says. "We constructed a large, parabola-shaped glass plate. It not
only absorbs the light, it also focuses it on one point, a thousand
times more than regular sunlight."
According to Feiman, "an ordinary photovoltaic cell, which is 10 by 10
centimeters, normally produces one watt of electricity. We managed to
extract more than a thousand times more - 1,500 watts. In this way,
the cost of a cell is 1,500 less, becoming almost nothing."
"No one has ever produced so much electricity from a solar cell at
this strength," he says.
The Solar Energy Center is now collaborating with an Israeli start-up
company, Zenith Solar, to create a home system of solar cells based on
this technology within about a year. "What is good for the home is
also good for the country," Feiman says.
Israeli solar energy technology is already used extensively in power
stations throughout the world. At the center at Sde Boker, which
belongs to the Jacob Blaustein Institutes for Desert Research of
Ben-Gurion University of the Negev, two solar panels are installed,
each one about 100 meters long, moving in synch with the sun. An oil
pipe is at the center. The panels, built by Sollel, a Beit Shemesh
company, are not based on photovoltaic cells, but rather focus the
light on the pipe, causing it to heat up. Heat produced by panels of
this type turn into steam, which moves turbines.
Last month, Sollel signed a contract with the U.S. company PG&E, to
build the largest power station in the world, in the Mojave desert in
California, which will have about 7,000 such panels and will cover
about 14 square kilometers. It is due to go into service in about four
years, providing 553 megawatts of electricity.
The British-born Feiman has lived at Midreshet Sde Boker since 1976,
when he began researching solar energy. A world expert in the field,
he says the economic model he has built will allow a significant part
of Israel's energy to go solar within the decade.
"We're paying about 10 cents per kilowatt/hour. If the government
taxes the Electric Corporation one cent per kilowatt/hour, it will
amount to about a half billion dollars a year. In a decade, we won't
need any outside funding. If we want to solve Israel's energy
problems, we should stop building conventional power stations and
build a solar power station every year of one gigawatt - equal to two
of the type of station Sollel is building in California."
The National Infrastructure Ministry said it would "soon be
determining electricity rates for home photovoltaic systems. At
present, the parties are working on removing obstacles that have to do
with land use."
I can tell you without a doubt that while it may make sense
for Israel to go to a lot of photovoltaic usage, they have a VERY
sunny climate. You wouldn't get a return on investment for 10,000
years if you lived in Seattle. I'm all for energy schemes that work,
but we have to bear in mind the differences between climatic
conditions, etc.
Exactly. Solar powered SUVs are in the far future.
--
The object of life is not to be on the side of the majority but to
escape finding oneself in the ranks of the insane. -- Marcus Aurelius
Wherever I go it will be well with me, for it was well with me here, not
on account of the place, but of my judgments which I shall carry away
with me, for no one can deprive me of these; on the contrary, they alone
are my property, and cannot be taken away, and to possess them suffices
me wherever I am or whatever I do. -- EPICTETUS
Joseph R. Darancette
daranc@NOSPAMcharter.net
.
|
|
|
| User: "Adam Whyte-Settlar none@none" |
|
| Title: Re: Sde Boker makes solar energy viable |
16 Sep 2007 11:35:52 AM |
|
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"Captain Compassion" <daranc@NOSPAMcharter.net> wrote in message
I can tell you without a doubt that while it may make sense
for Israel to go to a lot of photovoltaic usage, they have a VERY
sunny climate. You wouldn't get a return on investment for 10,000
years if you lived in Seattle. I'm all for energy schemes that work,
but we have to bear in mind the differences between climatic
conditions, etc.
It will work great in Seattle. Maybe not as well as in California but there
is plenty of light - a lot of people don't realise that it doesn't have to
be sunny for them to work.
Exactly. Solar powered SUVs are in the far future.
Like this one?
http://www2.nature.nps.gov/air/edu/someair/bigpicture/graphics/ev_suv.jpg
OK - it doesn't have a panel on the roof but it's electric and can be
charged up from any solar powered electric source.
I don't know about you but I like the idea of plugging my SUV into the wall
of the garage and having it filled up by panels on my roof.
If you want to keep paying increasing prices for petrol go ahead.
.
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