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U.N. Chief Goes To Work In Solar Taxi

September 17th, 2008 by kalyan89 in PV-General, Solar Energy - general, Solar Installations

by Windsor Genova – AHN News Writer, New York, September 12, 2008
Source: AllHeadNews.com
http://www.allheadlinenews.com/articles/7012276449

United Nations Secretary-General Ban Ki-moon took a solar-powered cab to work on Friday to raise awareness about climate change and to promote environmentally-friendly technologies.  The ride on the Swiss-built Solartaxi took Ban from his home in New York to the UN Secretariat building. Louis Palmer, the Solartaxi’s inventor, drove him to his office. (more…)

India’s ONGC to enter solar energy business

by Maulik Pathak, Ahmedabad September 17, 2008
Source: Business Standard.com
http://www.business-standard.com/india/storypage.php?autono=334659

After unveiling its plans to harness wind energy, ONGC, the country’s leading crude and gas producer, now plans to foray into solar and geothermal energy. The company is in talks with four companies, including a US-based firm, for setting up a photovoltaic (PV) cells unit.  The oil and gas major is also exploring geothermal energy for which it is in talks with Iceland government. All these projects will be carried out under its ONGC Energy Centre housed at Rajiv Gandhi Urja Bhavan, New Delhi. (more…)

27% Annual Growth Seen for Global Solar Cell Market

by Yukiko Kanou, Nikkei Electronics, Aug 19, 2008
Source: TechOn /
http://techon.nikkeibp.co.jp/english/NEWS_EN/20080819/156577/

The global solar cell market will grow at an annual rate of 27% on average until 2012 to ¥4.6751 trillion (approx US$42.5 billion), 3.9 times larger than in 2007, according to the survey conducted by Fuji Keizai Co Ltd. The solar cell market was ¥1.2008 trillion (approx US$10.9 billion) in 2007.  Polycrystalline silicon solar cells accounted for nearly 90% of the market in 2007, but the presence of solar cells that use a small amount of silicon or no silicon at all will strengthen, Fuji Keizai said. The focus will be placed on thin-film silicon, CIGS and CdTe (cadmium telluride) thin-film solar cells, in particular, according to the company. (more…)

Japan gets inexpensive, yet innovative solar cells

By Serkan Toto, September 1st, 2008
Source: CrunchGear.com
http://www.crunchgear.com/2008/09/01/japan-gets-inexpensive-yet-innovative-solar-cells/

Japanese companies Gunze and Dai Nippon Printing are each developing new technologies that make it possible to produce low-cost, pigment-sensitized solar cells. Gunze focuses on low-end solar cells that can be used to power smaller electronic appliances or in-store ad displays, for example. Their cells will use a film, which is coated with special pigments, as a power source. Gunze, actually a major underwear maker, says their film is bendable and can therefore be used fexibly. The company is thinking about offering  baseball caps with built-in solar cells to power portable audio players, for example. (more…)

ET Solar Group donates multiple PV Systems to Remote Area in Tibet

September 4th, 2008 by kalyan89 in Solar Energy - general, Solar Installations

Source: ET Solar Group Corp. press release/ Aug. 8, 2008

ET Solar Group Corp. (“ET Solar”), a Nanjing-based vertically integrated manufacturer of photovoltaic products including ingots, wafers, modules, and state-of-the-art dual-axis tracking systems with manufacturing facilities located in Taizhou, China, announced today that it has donated multiple PV systems to eight remote Tibetan villages.  ET Solar donated multiple PV systems worth nearly one million RMB, which will provide electricity for the eight Tibetan villages. These villages are located in a remote rural area that is more than 4,000 meters high and not connected to any electricity grid system. (more…)

Saudi Arabia positioned to become solar power

By William Pentland, Forbes, August 29, 2008 Source: CBCNews.ca http://www.cbc.ca/money/story/2008/08/27/f-forbes-saudisolar.html

In the wake of the first Gulf War, the U.S. Army assessed Saudi Arabia’s solar energy resource potential in a classified effort to determine how oil fires had affected the region. The results were clear and surprising. In addition to being a vast petroleum repository, the desert nation was also the heart of the most potentially productive region on the planet for harvesting power from the sun. In other words, Saudi Arabia was the Saudi Arabia of solar energy. (more…)

Solar Tree of Artemide to debut in Venice

Source: http://www.artemide.us/    Sept. 4, 2008
http://www.core77.com/blog/object_culture/solar_tree_to_debut_in_venice_10997.asp

Solar Tree, created by Ross Lovegrove, was developed and produced by Artemide in collaboration with Sharp Solar, world leader in solar cells production. This revolutionary urban lighting project works with the most advanced solar technology respecting not only environmental issues but also cultural and social aspects of today’s world. Solar Tree demanded very complex studies and analyses which Artemide has conducted with great commitment and sensitivity regarding ecological demands.

“Artemide has been considering social responsibility and sustainability for a long while now” says Ernesto Gismondi, the President of Artemide. “Respecting life, environment and all the natural resources available means facing the energy saving issue in a very serious way. Consequently advanced and high technical capacity technologies are created”. “Solar Tree is a project that celebrates design, nature and art”, says Ross Lovegrove, one of the most famous contemporary designers.

“Solar Tree represents the DNA of our time and it also shows it is possible to create beautiful things using the most advanced technology” Solar Tree is a sinuous tree made of steel pipes each one supporting a light bubble, to which there are 38 sophisticated solar cells connected to a battery system and to an electronic device hidden in its base. The light source consists of an array of LEDs which is the most advanced technology in lighting today.

After the great success obtained at MAK in Vienna (October 2007), in one of the most prestigious squares in Milano – Piazza della Scala – (November 2007) and in the wonderful Champs Elysees in Paris (February 2008), Solar Tree’s european tour continues. From April 6th will be in Frankfurt-am-Main at Light + Building 2008

Ross Lovegrove’s Solar Trees have been on tour in cities across Europe and make their next stop in Venice at the Biennale dell’ Architettura. Designed to resemble a bouquet of flowers, the petals are lined with LED bulbs and photovoltaic cells. During the day the flower absorbs energy to recharge a battery pack which illuminates the LED bulbs at dusk.

Arguably this is not a new idea, every year designers and design students pump out their version of this concept but it seems it’s going to take the efforts of prominent design figure Lovegrove and heavyweight lighting manufacture Artemide to raise the public awareness.

Solar energy could employ 10 million by 2030

Source: Environmental Research Web.com / Sept 2, 2008
http://environmentalresearchweb.org/cws/article/futures/35662

Solar energy can make a large contribution to the energy needs of two-thirds of the world’s population by 2030, including those in remote areas. That’s according to Solar Generation, a report from Greenpeace and the European Photovoltaic Industry Association (EPIA).  “Solar photovoltaic electricity has the potential to supply energy to more than four billion people by 2030 if adequate policy measures are put in place today,” said Ernesto Macias, EPIA president, as the report was presented at the 23rd European Photovoltaic Solar Energy Conference in Valencia, Spain.

By the end of 2007 more than 9,200 MW of solar photovoltaic systems had been installed around the world. But by 2030 Solar Generation estimates that more than 1800 GW of photovoltaic systems will have been installed worldwide, creating more than 2600 TWh of the electricity produced per year – or 14% of global electricity demand. The power would be enough to supply more than 1.3 billion people in developed areas and at least 3 billion people in remote rural areas who currently have no access to mains electricity. (more…)

Ethiopia powers up with solar energy

By David Ehrlich, Cleantech Group Exclusive, August 8, 2008
Source: CleanTech.com
http://media.cleantech.com/3213/ethiopia-powers-solar-energy

Germany’s Solar Energy Foundation aims to improve living conditions and foster a solar industry in Ethiopia.  The rural village of Rema in Ethiopia could become a cleantech boom-town if the work of Germany’s Solar Energy Foundation continues its success in the region. Since 2006, the foundation has installed 2,000 solar systems in Rema and in nearby Rema ena Dire, the biggest solar power project in East Africa. The project has brought power to 5,500 residents in a country where only one percent of people in rural areas have access to electricity. (more…)

Massive solar plant proposed in Carbon County, Pennsylvania

By Sandy Bauers, Inquirer Staff Writer, Aug. 8, 2008
Source: The Philadelphia Inquirer
http://www.philly.com/inquirer/health_science/daily/
20080808_Massive_solar_plant_proposed_in_Carbon_County.html

When John F. Curtis III looks at the heart of Pennsylvania’s anthracite country, he doesn’t see a blighted landscape or a heyday long gone.  He envisions the second-largest solar power plant in the nation. Yesterday, Curtis and state officials announced a $65 million solar project on 100 fallow acres in one of Carbon County’s oldest mining towns, Nesquehoning. It would generate 10.6 megawatts of power, enough to increase the state’s current solar output by a factor of 10 and provide electricity for 1,450 households. If he gets the money.

Curtis, who founded the Conshohocken renewable-energy development firm Green Energy Capital Partners in March 2007, acknowledged he had neither all the financing nor a purchasing agreement for the power the facility would produce. Further, the project hinges on Congress’ reauthorizing a federal tax credit of 30 percent for such projects. Curtis said he also needed money from the state’s recently passed $650 million energy independence bill. How residents and companies would get the money has not been decided yet.

But he said he was “confident everything will be financed in short order.” He said purchase orders for 46,000 solar panels – to be mounted on 912 trackers that would follow the sun, east to west – were pending, and he expects to break ground in March. Commercial operation could begin by the end of 2009, he said.

Meanwhile, supporters were jubilant. “Now you have, right in the heart of coal country, the beginning of the solar century,” said John Hanger, president of Citizens for Pennsylvania’s Future, an advocacy group. Hanger also called the project “the fruit” of Gov. Rendell’s recently passed energy policy. “It couldn’t happen at a better time, it couldn’t be a bigger vote of confidence for Pennsylvania’s alternative energy policies,” he said. “This is really big.”

Pennsylvania still has a long way to go to catch New Jersey. Because of the Garden State’s strong rebate program, nearly 3,000 solar installations deliver 54 megawatts of power. Still, Monique Hanis, spokeswoman for the Solar Energy Industries Association, an industry group, confirmed that the Carbon County facility would be the second-largest of its kind in the United States, after the 14-megawatt solar installation at Nellis Air Force Base near Las Vegas.

State Rep. Keith R. McCall (D., Carbon) said the facility would bring 50 jobs to the area. More than that, “to think that we’re still sitting on probably 300 to 500 years of coal reserves . . . it just shows that we’re trying to be innovative.” The culture decades ago was one of coal-baron millionaires and miners who died from what their widows called “the black lung.”

“The legacy of coal was one that when they left, they left the scarred landscape behind as well,” McCall said. “It was difficult to get anybody to take a second look at Carbon County.” “The reality is, we are putting the nuts and bolts together on the [state’s] entire energy package, but that will come to fruition,” McCall said. “Just a commitment letter from the governor would suffice for the company to get the proper financing to make this thing work.” The property is owned by Kovatch Enterprises, which builds fire trucks and emergency vehicles and is Carbon County’s largest employer.

Though Pennsylvania is hardly the sunniest spot in the nation, its “renewable portfolio standards” make it attractive for solar, wind and other renewable energies. The standards require utilities to generate or buy a percentage of their power from renewable sources – equal to 850 megawatts by 2021. “What we’re doing fits hand in glove with the requirements,” said Curtis, who has 20 years of experience in medical and information technology marketing and who recently was Eastern U.S. development manager for UPC Solar of Chicago.

Analysts say 850 megawatts cannot be met by rooftop installations on homes and small business, and the trend has been toward utility-scale projects. A 1.4-megawatt facility is planned for the former Philadelphia Navy Yard, and a 3-megawatt facility is under construction in Falls Township next to the GROWS landfill.

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