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Showdown in the sun (Solar Decathlon contest)

Student inventors are gathering at the Solar Decathlon in Washington to vie for the top prize and create a new generation of green homes.
By Marc Gunther, Senior writer, FORTUNE Magazine, October 15 2007
Source: CNNMoney.com
http://money.cnn.com/2007/10/12/magazines/fortune/solar_decathalon.fortune/
The clean energy homes of tomorrow are on display all this week on America’s Main Street, the national mall in Washington, D.C.- and they are generating excitement from the FORTUNE 500 companies, government advocates for renewable energy and even some venture capitalists. They are there as part of the U.S. Department of Energy’s Solar Decathlon, a contest in which 20 colleges vie to build energy-efficient, sustainable, attractive and affordable homes. The results can be eye-popping.
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Sharp anticipates meaningful pick-up in thin-film solar cell market in 2013

October 15th, 2007 by kalyan89 in Press Releases, Reports, PV-General, SC Company Reports

Nuying Huang, Taipei; Esther Lam
Source: DIGITIMES, Friday 12 October 2007
http://www.digitimes.com/

Leading solar cell maker Sharp is confident about the prospects for the thin-film solar cell market, expecting that meaningful penetration should be seen from 2013, said company solar systems group deputy manager Tatsuo Saga at the ongoing Taiwan International Photovoltaic (PV) Forum & Exhibition 2007 (October 11-12) in Taipei.
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Neo Solar Power secures solar module order worth NT$5 billion

October 15th, 2007 by kalyan89 in Press Releases, Reports, PV-General, SC Company Reports

Nuying Huang, Taipei; Esther Lam,
Source: DIGITIMES, Monday 15 October 2007
http://www.digitimes.com/bits_chips/a20071015PD203.html

Neo Solar Power recently announced that it has secured a three-year order worth NT$4.4 billion (US$134.6 million) with Netherlands-based Scheuten Solar for solar cells. The total order amount from Scheuten is to reach NT$5 billion, the company added.  Neo Solar indicated that the deal with Scheuten will be effective from 2008. Since both parties already have a partnership underway, Neo Solar will land a total of NT$5 billion-worth of orders over the next three years. Based on present solar cell prices, industry players estimate that the deal will be equivalent to 50 peak megawatt (MWp) of solar cells.
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Solar-powered parking lots

October 15th, 2007 by kalyan89 in Press Releases, Reports, PV-General, R&D reports, Solar Installations

by Donald Shoup, October 14, 2007
Source: San Francisco Chronicle /SFGate.com
http://www.sfgate.com/cgi-bin/article.cgi?file=/c/a/2007/10/14/EDIOSO3NR.DTL

On hot, sunny days when air conditioners threaten to overload the power grid, solar power generation makes a lot of sense. Solar panels produce the most electricity exactly when demand peaks, so they reduce the load on conventional power plants at the right time. Solar panels also cleanly and quietly produce power exactly where it is consumed, so they help to prevent power outages caused by overloaded transmission lines.
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Pentagon backs plan to beam solar power from space

Kilometre-sized solar panel arrays would gather sunlight in orbit, then beam it to Earth in the form of microwaves or a laser.
Dan Cho, Washington, DC, 11 October 2007
NewScientist.com news service
Source: New Scientist-Environment
http://environment.newscientist.com/article/dn12774-
pentagon-backs-plan-to-beam-solar-power-from-space.html

A futuristic scheme to collect solar energy on satellites and beam it to Earth has gained a large supporter in the US military. A report released yesterday by the National Security Space Office recommends that the US government sponsor projects to demonstrate solar-power-generating satellites and provide financial incentives for further private development of the technology.
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My Favorite Solar Power Stocks (by Timothy Lutts)

October 11th, 2007 by kalyan89 in Press Releases, Reports, PV-General, R&D reports

by Timothy Lutts, October 4th, 2007
Source: Cabot Wealth Advisory
http://www.cabotwealth.com/2007/10/04/200/

One of the strongest group of stocks today, and one of my old favorites, is Solar Power Stocks!  I mentioned these many times earlier this year when they were among the market’s leaders. And I’m happy to report that they’re still among the leaders today! So I’m going to resume writing about them because I can’t think of a bigger market opportunity than the one these companies are addressing. (more…)

XsunX Makes Plans to Locate New Solar Module Manufacturing Facilities in Oregon, U.S.A.

October 11th, 2007 by kalyan89 in Press Releases, Reports, PV-General, SC Company Reports

Aliso Viejo, CA., Sept. 25
Source: PRNewswire/CNNMoney.com
http://money.cnn.com/news/newsfeeds/articles/prnewswire/CLTU05425092007-1.htm

XsunX, Inc. , a company working to begin the build-out of its planned 100 mega watt thin film photovoltaic (TFPV) solar module manufacturing facilities, today announced it has selected the state of Oregon as the location for its planned facilities and is working with representatives to finalize a manufacturing site location.  “We’re very motivated by the overall program that was submitted to XsunX by Oregon’s Business and Energy Development Departments,” stated Mr. Tom Djokovich, XsunX’s CEO. “The combination of operating incentives and credits, added to low cost financing opportunities allowed us to make what we believe was the best decision possible for locating our planned multi-mega watt facilities in Oregon. The state has shown a great deal of desire to attract XsunX and the large number of knowledge-based jobs our facility would create. The state has also traditionally been a leader in green initiatives and is fostering a great environment for the sale of solar products as well.”
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Can Australia regain its photovoltaics status?

By Martin A Green / 08 October 2007
Source: ScienceAlert – Australia & New Zealand
http://www.sciencealert.com.au/opinions/20070810-16428.html

Photovoltaics – direct sunlight conversion into electricity using solar cells – has long been lumped with nuclear fusion as one of the great hopes for a boundless, clean energy future, although recent fusion interest has shifted to the more difficult ‘aneutronic’ version, which reduces fusion’s radioactive wastes but is even further in the future.  Unlike fusion, the technical viability of photovoltaics has long been established, with this occurring in applications requiring extremes of reliability and durability. Since the early 1960s, photovoltaics has been the main power source for space missions of any duration. Closer to home, it has been the standard power source for telecommunications in remote areas of Australia since the early 1980s. In the same timeframe, there was the view that the photovoltaics industry would grow steadily to a size where it would suddenly take off, as reducing prices opened up new market sectors. Wise heads debated how large a growth rate an emerging industry could sustain over a prolonged period, with a compounded rate of 25 per cent a year a consensus view.
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Storing Solar Power Efficiently

Thermal-power plants that store heat for cloudy days could solve some of the problems with solar power.
By Peter Fairley / September 27, 2007
Source: MIT Technology Review
http://www.technologyreview.com/Energy/19440/

Solar proponents love to boast that just a few hundred square kilometers’ worth of photovoltaic solar panels installed in Southwestern deserts could power the United States. Their schemes come with a caveat, of course: without backup power plants or expensive investments in giant batteries, flywheels, or other energy-storage systems, this solar-power supply would fluctuate wildly with each passing cloud (not to mention with the sun’s daily rise and fall and seasonal ebbs and flows). Solar-power startup Ausra, based in Palo Alto, thinks it has the solution: solar-thermal-power plants that turn sunlight into steam and efficiently store heat for cloudy days.
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Display Technology Promises Cheaper Solar Power

Large-scale manufacturing techniques used to build LCDs could make solar power far more competitive.
By Kevin Bullis, October 02, 2007
Source: MIT Technology Review
http://www.technologyreview.com/Nanotech/19464/

The big manufacturing equipment that has helped bring down costs for flat-screen TVs based on liquid-crystal-display (LCD) technology may soon bring prices for solar electricity more in line with prices for electricity from the grid. Applied Materials, a company based in Santa Clara, CA, that supplies manufacturing equipment to LCD makers, as well as to major microchip makers, has converted its equipment to produce thin-film silicon solar cells that are cheap enough to compete with more conventional solar cells. This may eventually lead to much cheaper solar power.
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