solar energy is now cheaper than coal.http://www.solveclimate.com/blog/20071219/1-watt-itunes-solar-energy-has-arrived
1/9/2008 1:47:11 AM
this would be an excellent investment
1/9/2008 1:54:47 AM
^ they're private bunch of companies are listed as having invested thoughhttp://www.nanosolar.com/investors.htm
1/9/2008 1:57:13 AM
perhaps they will IPO or start trading on OTCBBwith that new technology, they could be prime for an early acquistionthats a game changing technology[Edited on January 9, 2008 at 2:03 AM. Reason : .]
1/9/2008 2:01:10 AM
Yup, it's only a matter of a decade or so before places like Saudi Arabia and Yemen are back to a point when rugs are their primary export to the US.It's appalled me for quite some time that we still burn coal and oil for electricity when there are better, cleaner, and smarter ways to do it.
1/9/2008 2:33:11 AM
Oh that is FANTASTIC!AWESOME!How big are the panels? Anybody know? *goes to read the link and do research on these d00ds*
1/9/2008 3:45:21 AM
I like the sound of this.
1/9/2008 8:59:45 AM
I'd be on this in a heartbeat if they ever come to market. I've been following solar PV for 15 years, and could give a rat's butt about super-efficient panels for most applications. If this company can actually pull this off and become the Wal-mart of solar, more power to them.
1/9/2008 9:04:52 AM
1/9/2008 10:01:24 AM
1/9/2008 10:13:05 AM
yaya power source that wont power your lights when you need them
1/9/2008 10:35:17 AM
Sweet! I worked out the math on this once (when NOVA had their residential solar power show), and IIRC Solar cells were about $5/watt then, and would take about 20-30 years to pay for themselves. This should bring it down to 4-5 years to pay for themselves.The nice thing is, if your home generates more power than it uses and ends up putting more power back onto the grid, the power company pays you at the same price it would have charged you, and you end up getting a cheque every month.
1/9/2008 10:39:00 AM
^^ don't be a fucking retard, this is the lounge.Sounds great to me!
1/9/2008 11:00:36 AM
Also you can use that backfeed on the power during the day to even out your bill at night. In the end you may not make much, but you also shouldn't really owe anything from nighttime use either.I wouldn't mind if it became this cheap to run. I just wasn't interested in dropping the price of my house on solar panels that would take as long as the house to pay off.
1/9/2008 11:07:59 AM
1/9/2008 11:12:29 AM
if anybody has problems with this advance in technology and discovery, they should be killed off and not allowed to breed.solar power FTW. thanks for the article.I plan on spending 5k - 10k on solar panels soon to power my house for the rest of my life.
1/9/2008 11:31:11 AM
how in the hell do they figure that printing solar cells at $1/watt somehow makes them cheaper than coal? The expensive part of hooking up a solar power generator is all the control equipment to connect it to the grid. Inverters, fault detection, aliasing and anti-aliasing schemes, etc. If you really think you're want to protect the environment, you'd be better off spending the $10,000 cost of a 1kw solar generator on compact flourescent bulbs and giving them away.
1/9/2008 11:39:50 AM
1/9/2008 11:43:14 AM
I live in rural NC, so I doubt that my little towns going to worry about it.And I agree, nuclear is the power supply of choice for the grid. It is practically impossible to power the entire grid 100% of the time with renewable power. Nuclear fission is the answer, at least until they ever figure out fusion. At that point, all other power sources will become obsolete anyways.
1/9/2008 12:34:15 PM
rural areas make this even more of an issue.[Edited on January 9, 2008 at 12:47 PM. Reason : having a generator on a tap line fucks up the fuse coordination on the line.]
1/9/2008 12:46:15 PM
1/9/2008 12:49:13 PM
Well, considering the fact that Toyota is rolling out the first hydrogen powered vehicle to the public this year (in Japan only), yeah. I expect in a decade or two gas powered cars will be the exception in this country, not the norm. Continuing advances in solar, wind, tidal, and nuclear energy will reduce further reduce our dependency on fossil fuels for power, and then we really only have to worry about oil for manufacturing needs (plastics, etc.) and there is enough in the US for us to not import for that purpose. It may be further off than I'm hoping, but within my lifetime I think we'll see the death of US dependency on OPEC. Now, the thing that will really help is if we share technology with China and India, because those two are really going to affect the environment in the next 50 years in ways the US never did.
1/9/2008 1:49:04 PM
1/9/2008 2:03:26 PM
1/9/2008 2:23:58 PM
1/9/2008 2:46:57 PM
yay for pessimism!!idiots
1/9/2008 2:51:43 PM
i don't think it's so much the battery system than the oh...40 cent per kWh pricesthe complete inability to satisfy grid requirementsA few bucks into batteries would be preferable to nuclear waste sort of. But I think a failed economy and global warming are things that I'll take nuclear waste in lieu of.
1/9/2008 3:10:13 PM
1/9/2008 3:12:31 PM
1/9/2008 3:17:46 PM
^I've always thought a desirable energy system would be one in which solar power on roofs, etc., could be used to supply demand/peak power, and centralized power plants (nukes) are used to supply base residential power and commercial/industrial power. The technology is fairly interesting. It sounds like they are printing the cells with a copper-indium-gallium-selenide nanoparticle ink. Printing helps to reduce cost, since vacuum deposition techniques are expensive. They must also have a cheap way to put on the conducting top layer. Based on the patents, it looks like a conducting polymer - wonder what the lifetime is. The CIGS solar panels tend to have less efficiency than the Si based solar panels. They claim to deliver 5-10 times more current than "traditional thin film panels". Their claim could be a bit of semantics, if they consider traditional Si based solar panels to not be "thin film". Current and efficiency are not necessarily the same thing anyways. I couldn't find any efficiency comparisons in their website. "Cheap and works fairly well" may be better than "expensive and works really well" though.[Edited on January 9, 2008 at 4:26 PM. Reason : Google patent search kicks ass]
1/9/2008 4:17:16 PM
1/9/2008 4:20:35 PM
I'm working in solar energy research here at state and this is great news.Contrary to some of the posts here, Nuclear power will probably not be the choice of energy for the future of this country for several reasons, most easily to state is demand.Nathan Lewis and Dan Nocera have both stated that to meet world energy demand by 2050 from Nuclear Power, we would need to build a new reactor about every 3 days. This totals up to about 3-4000 new reactors that need to be built, pronto.That doesn't even begin to discuss waste management policy for nuclear power, which has no consistent guidelines for treating and storing waste.In the 1950's, huge vats of nuclear waste was acidified by concentrated acid and buried deep in mines and shafts underground. To remove certain deadly toxins, you could spend years of research developing something that could be stable enough to handle both radiation and strong acid to remove certain ions like Cs and Ra.Then, about 25 years later, they decided maybe it was better to put them in concentrated base instead of acid. Now an entirely new problem is at your hands.Current Nuclear Energy policy in the US will most certainly guarantee that we will never see a fully nuclear run country in our lifetimes.Solar energy, OTOH, has a much greater, and safer, potential.In terms of just solar panels, you could meet current world energy demand by covering as little as 0.1% of the earth's surface with solar panels having only 10% efficiency. Many low-inhabited places on earth that are considered prime areas for peak wattage can achieve 20% with more efficient panels based on GaAs type solar cells.but you have to think outside of the box to really use all the potential you can from solar panels.For one, solar panels produce only electricity, which is difficult and expensive to store for those rough days of non-optimal sunlight. Transport over long distances is not feasible either, so a new way of storage is necessaryNaTaO3 is a metal oxide compound that, when immersed in water and exposed to UV light, produces H2 gas, which can then be stored and transported as an energy fuel source much easier than pure electricity. This method also produces no harmful greenhouse gases that could damage the environment like CO2. This compound is over 50% efficient in UV light. Further research in these fields could potentially lead to a visible light active source that is equally efficient and also extremely low in cost to develop. I did the calculations myself based on the efficiency of this compound, and, such a system scaled up to produce enough H2 to keep your car full (avg 1 tank/week range ~250mi) you would pay about $10,000. Seems a bit high now, but that's mostly due to the metal cost of tantalum oxide. Cheaper metals like Niobium Oxide could cut this cost in half. What's so great is that if you do this, you would never have to pay for gas again in your life. These compounds don't decompose or breakdown. As long as you add water you continue to produce H2 gas. Solar Energy is definitely the energy source of the future.It's the SUN. The damn thing has been keeping the earth warm for 4 billion years. We should learn to really harness its full potential
1/9/2008 5:04:51 PM
1/9/2008 5:17:09 PM
^^High level nuclear waste is stored in solid form in casks. There is some talk of vitrification, though I don't know what, if any, plans there are for actually doing this. I don't know where you got the idea that high-level nuclear waste is currently dissolved to store it, but this is wrong. In the 50's there were molten-salt reactors that had uranium salts in sulfuric acid, I believe. Perhaps this is what you are confused with. Furthermore, there most certianly are guidelines for how to store nuclear waste. The EPA and NRC have waste disposal guidelines.I agree that the country will probably not be nuclear-only. Nevertheless, it needs to be a major source of our energy if we are to reduce our dependance on foriegn oil.I also think you are overstating the abilities of solar power. While it certianly can be an important source of power, key problems in efficiency and transport limit its usefulness. I think your power numbers are based on optimistic estimates, eg. using the peak solar power during the day at the equator rather than an average.Since you are working on solar power, could you comment on the expected efficiency of these panels? It would be interesting to compare them to traditional solar panels on a cost/W cm^2 basis.[Edited on January 9, 2008 at 5:22 PM. Reason : adsfd]
1/9/2008 5:20:45 PM
There's little reason not to utilize nature when possible to provide for our electrical needs. There is no reason (outside of current cost) not to be utilizing things like the tides, the wind, and the sun to produce electricity. We could easily throw down solar panels in places like Nevada, Utah, Arizona, etc. on land that is otherwise virtually uninhabitable and not arable. There's no good reason that places like Kansas, Oklahoma, Nebraska, west Texas, etc. should not be chock full of wind farms. This is all fucking free energy folks. Our electrical grid should not be largely dependent on burning things to boil water to make steam to turn a turbine. It boggles the mind that the technology is still basically unchanged since the inception of electrical generation.Obviously we'll need to continue to develop the technology further until we reach the efficiency levels needed to eliminate the need for other sources. Until then we should be using nuclear, it's the least environmentally harmful.[Edited on January 9, 2008 at 5:31 PM. Reason : adsf]
1/9/2008 5:28:35 PM
[Edited on January 9, 2008 at 5:30 PM. Reason :
1/9/2008 5:29:26 PM
1/9/2008 5:29:32 PM
1/9/2008 5:33:13 PM
[Edited on January 9, 2008 at 5:43 PM. Reason :
1/9/2008 5:41:57 PM
^your calculations don't take into consideration the nuclear plants that are already in existance. some countries already get a large portion of their energy demands from existing nuclear plants.A doubling of our current energy usage by 2050 sounds like a conservative estimate though.
1/9/2008 6:25:58 PM
The solar panels themselves still contribute a hefty portion ($5k - $10k for 1-2 kW - http://store.solar-electric.com/hiposopa.html) of the total system cost, generally $20-30k. Replacing currently available panels with "revolutionary, new, cheap" panels is a worthy concept, it's just not all there is to it. I thinks it's worthwhile to put the whole expense in perspective. Buying a house these days is expensive - you might pay $250k for what might have been $100k ten years ago, when the only thing to show for the difference is a ten year older house. Housing costs are generally only going to go up and solar PV costs are gradually going down. Bottom line: $20k for a PV system on a $200k house isn't as bad as $20k for a PV system on a $100k house, in terms of the time it takes to save $ for such house purchases.
1/9/2008 6:26:43 PM
1/9/2008 6:33:52 PM
is water not a factor in nuclear power as well? how would a drought prone location cope with more reactors that require a constant/dedicated water supply when there is no local(extra) water? even if nuclear power is more efficient, with global warming and/or drought it may become less effective if nuclear power plants have to use less water and use part of the energy to cool water through some quicker means[Edited on January 9, 2008 at 7:56 PM. Reason : a]
1/9/2008 7:53:59 PM
1/9/2008 9:14:43 PM
1/10/2008 12:25:40 AM
I've been telling you fucking people about NanoSolar for 2 years or more.But more importantly, this is a breakthrough for business, not the home. Businesses are the ones for the forseeable future that will be making use of NanoSolar's technology. Hell, they won't even be selling their stuff in the US for another year or two (from what I heard one of the owners say a year ago) because the demand is absolutely insane in Japan and western Europe.Yes its badass technology, and yes it WILL trickle down to the home in time.^as for your arguments of solar vs nuclear. You are completely ignoring reprocessing. Which the US outlawed back in the 60's because some stupid fear of enriched material being lost to the russians. If you put reprocessing plants back in service ,it virtually eliminates the future waste problems. You can reprocess 95-99% of nuclear waste, leaving about a pebble per reactor, per year, of completely spent fuel.Nuclear is also massively cheaper to operate and is currently the ONLY baseline power alternative to coal. Solar and Wind are not viable for baseline power for obvious reasons, and we do not have enough storage capacity in the world to carry the brunt of an on/off baseline system.[Edited on January 10, 2008 at 1:27 AM. Reason : .]
1/10/2008 1:21:36 AM
1/10/2008 9:40:11 AM
eleusis,This was in my first post.
1/10/2008 10:22:04 AM
[Edited on January 10, 2008 at 10:43 AM. Reason :
1/10/2008 10:39:58 AM
does anybody ever read entire posts?god i hate the internet
1/10/2008 10:55:33 AM