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Singapore’s first zero-energy building (powered by solar panels) to be ready in 2009

By Wong Siew Ying, Channel NewsAsia, 07 November 2007
Source: Channel NewsAsia
http://www.channelnewsasia.com/stories/singaporelocalnews/view/310174/1/.html

SINGAPORE : Singapore will construct its first zero-energy building (ZEB) at Braddell Road to promote green technology.  S$10 million will be spent to retrofit an existing facility to incorporate some of the latest energy-efficient inventions.  It’s being hailed as the Building and Construction Authority’s (BCA) flagship R&D project under its Green Building Masterplan. The building is able to generate as much electricity as it consumes through renewable energy. This works out to a net energy consumption of zero over a typical year. The BCA said the 3,000-sq metre building is expected to be 60 percent more energy efficient than conventional buildings. (more…)

35-year old Swiss Louis Palmer going around the world in a solar taxi

November 13th, 2007 by kalyan89 in Press Releases, Reports, PV-General, Solar Energy - general

by Meenakshi Sinha,TNN / Oct 28. 2007
Source: Times of India
http://timesofindia.indiatimes.com/Around_the_world_in_a_solar_taxi/articleshow/2495823.cms

Louis Palmer dreamt of travelling around the world in a car when he was just 14. Twenty one years later, his dream saw the light of day when he invented an eco-friendly car powered only by solar energy. The 35-year old Swiss is now on a promotional world tour in his solar car, demonstrating that sustainable technologies are perfectly suited for everyday use, even to go around the world! “With this tour I want to show that solutions against global warming are available and that it can be stopped,” he says. He is currently in India, doing a tour of Mumbai, Udaipur, Delhi, Agra and Kolkata.

He has already travelled through all continents, by bicycle, ultra light airplane and a car. Palmer says the many signs of global warming that he came across disturbed him. “The weather has changed so drastically in almost all the 60 countries I visited, that people are alarmed. This prompted me to build my solar car, which I humorously call a ‘solar taxi’ as I take passengers for a ride.” His taxi is not only eco-friendly, but economical too. According to Louis, a compact solar taxi (without the trailer) could be built for Rs 3 lakh.

Developed by Palmer with the help of students from four Swiss technical universities over a period of one year, the solar taxi consists of a vehicle and trailer with solar cells – it’s 100% renewable energy with no polluting emissions. Palmer envisions a future where solar cells will adorn rooftops of houses so that people can charge their car batteries. “My idea is to have an energy bank of sorts, from which people can take as much electricity as they feed into the grid.So if you have solar cells on your rooftop feeding electricity into your grid, you can recharge your car electrically by taking as much from the grid. This way, you can ‘refuel’ along your journey and be unaffected by cloudy or rainy weather,” he says.

The solar taxi, which travels at a maximum speed of 90 kmph on its three wheels, is equipped with luxurious, leather-covered bucket seats guaranteeing both fun and comfort. The person in the passenger seat too can drive the vehicle as the steering slides across horizontally.

Palmer started his world tour on July 3, 2007 in Lucerne, Switzerland and travelled across Germany, Czech Republic, Austria, Slovakia, Hungary, Romania, Serbia, Bulgaria, Turkey, Syria, Lebanon, Jordan, Saudi Arabia and the UAE. From Dubai, he shipped the solar car to Mumbai. “So far almost all car drivers that I came across have given me the ‘thumbs up’ sign of encouragement; sometimes they were curious to find out how it works,” he says. The route he takes for the rest of his tour will depend on the invitations he receives.

Armed with a screen and projector for presentations, his goal is to cover at least 50,000 km and visit 50 countries in five continents.  If everything works out, this project will set a world record of being the first motor vehicle powered by non-fossil fuel to drive around the world.

He already has some interesting tales to tell from his experiences. In Syria, Palmer was involved in a crash when another taxi rammed into his car. But he promptly got police escort after that. “It was like real protocol, where even when I drove to a shop to buy a juice can, I was escorted by police cars and motorbikes with blaring sirens!” says Palmer. In Saudi Arabia, expecting stiff resistance for promoting a non-fossil fuel car, Palmer got the Saudi king himself to grant permission and also a 24-hour police escort in Riyadh.

While in India, Palmer hopes to highlight this alternative mode of mobility as he feels that a strong message from a developing economy is the need of the hour. “With so many petrol cars, polluted air, traffic jams and noise levels, quality of life is minimised. I can’t imagine how ill Mumbai will look 10 years from now with double the amount of cars.” Maybe, here’s a unique chance for India to embrace forward thinking.

Solar Power Technology Claims Misleading

November 13th, 2007 by kalyan89 in PV-General, R&D reports, Solar Energy - general

By Michael Schirber, Special to LiveScience. 01 November 2007
Source: LifeScience.com
http://www.livescience.com/technology/071101-organic-solar.html

A new type of solar cell has recently gained attention as a possible cost-effective way to turn sunlight into electricity. Made from organic materials, the cells are cheaper and more flexible than currently used silicon-based solar cells. But new information suggests organic solar cells may not work as well as advertised. “There is a lot of press about breakthroughs that are basically unsubstantiated,” said Keith Emery of the National Renewable Energy Laboratory in Golden, Colo.
(more…)

High efficiency silicon solar cell developed at IMEC

by Steve Bush, 1 November 2007
Source: electronicsweekly.com
http://www.electronicsweekly.com/Articles/2007/11/01/42520/
high+efficiency+silicon+solar+cell+developed+at+imec.htm

Belgium research organisation IMEC has reported 17.4 per cent efficiency in thin multi-crystalline silicon solar cells. The cells were made using the lab’s i-PERC (industrial-passivated emitter and rear cells) process which to save cost shuns high-purity semiconductor-type processing in favour of more industrial techniques. The record-breaker is a 100cm sq. 180µm thick device with a short circuit current of 35.22mA/cm sq. and an open circuit voltage of 629.8mV.
(more…)

US Dept. of Energy to Invest More than $21 Million for Next Generation Solar Energy Projects

25 Cutting Edge Projects Target Enhanced Solar Energy Efficiency
Washington D.C.–U.S. November 8, 2007

Department of Energy (DOE) Secretary Samuel W. Bodman today announced that the Department will invest $21.7 million in next generation photovoltaic (PV) technology to help accelerate the widespread use of advanced solar power. The 25 projects that DOE selected as part of this Funding Opportunity Announcement, Next Generation Photovoltaic Devices & Processes, are an integral part of the President’s Solar America Initiative, which aims to make solar energy cost-competitive with conventional sources of electricity by 2015. (more…)

Popular Science’s 20th Annual Best of What’s New Awards: GreenTech award goes to PowerSheet Flexible solar cells

Source: EarthTimes.org /Popular Science, press release
New York, 12 Nov 2007
http://www.earthtimes.org/articles/show/news_press_release,221537.shtml

For the second consecutive year, Popular Science is honoring one top product out of its 100 Best of What’s New award winners as “Innovation of the Year.” This honor goes to the remarkably designed PowerSheet flexible solar cells. Imagine a solar panel without the panel. Nanosolar has created an ink that takes sunlight and converts it into electricity. The ink is coated onto metal sheets as thin as aluminum foil with a printing-press-like device. The sheets are lighter, inexpensive and as efficient as traditional solar panels. The editors of PopSci believe that eventually every commercial rooftop could be carpeted with PowerSheet solar cells.
(more…)

Potential for solar energy large in India

by Ashish Kumar Mishra, TNN, 10 Nov, 2007
Source: Economic Times
http://economictimes.indiatimes.com/The_Big_Story/
Potential_for_solar_energy_large_in_India/articleshow/2531030.cms

In India, the prospect of solar energy is sunny but without being too hot. Today, the country generates almost 1,748 MW power through solar energy. That’s a pittance when compared to India’s total demand of almost 1.3 lakh MW every year. However, companies with investments in the technology believe that the potential for solar energy is much larger than the above share.  “In the next five years, I see solar technology supplying a major part of the world’s energy requirement,” says Ratul Puri, Executive Director, Moser Baer. Mr Puri wouldn’t believe otherwise. In the last couple of years, he has invested almost Rs 161 crore in the manufacturing of photovoltaic solar cells and panels.
(more…)

Some Taiwan solar cell makers reportedly consider giving up thin-film

November 10th, 2007 by kalyan89 in Press Releases, Reports, R&D reports, Solar Energy - general

Nuying Huang, Taipei; Rodney Chan, 29 October 2007
Source: DIGITIMES
http://www.digitimes.com/bits_chips/a20071029PD203.html

Some Taiwan-based players who are developing thin-film solar cells are considering quitting the segment because of the high technological barrier, difficulties in sourcing funding and marketing concerns, according to market sources.  So far, nine Taiwan-based companies have said they are developing thin-film solar cells. But the sources indicated that the huge investments required for the development towards taking the conversion efficiency beyond the current 5-8% has been a major factor causing some of the makers to consider quitting the segment or look into selling their thin-film units.
(more…)

Japan’s Tokuyama says solar market in a bubble

November 10th, 2007 by kalyan89 in Press Releases, Reports, PV-General, Solar Energy - general

Tokyo, Nov 5, 2007
Source: Reuters
http://www.reuters.com/article/companyNewsAndPR/idUSTKG00285520071105

Japanese chemicals and silicon maker Tokuyama Corp. said on Monday the market for solar cells in in a bubble situation.  “The market is very feverish,” Managing Director Yukio Muranaga told Reuters in an interview. “I have no doubt that demand for solar batteries will grow, but I don’t think it will grow at 30 percent or 40 percent a year as people seem to think.”
(more…)

Green firm’s solar-power fridges win Ghana deal

by Sion Barry, Western Mail, Oct 31 2007
Source. ICWales.co.uk
http://icwales.icnetwork.co.uk/business-in-wales/business-news/
2007/10/31/green-firm-s-solar-power-fridges-win-ghana-deal-91466-20035277/

RENEWABLE-ENERGY company Dulas has secured a major new order from Ghana’s health ministry for its solar-powered vaccine fridges.  The deal for the Machynlleth- based firm comes after promoting its vaccine fridge at the MedicAfrica exhibition in Lusaka, Zambia, two years ago.

One of these fridges was presented to the Zambian Government as a gift from the Welsh Assembly Government at the trade show and Dulas representatives also delivered a letter to Zambia’s President Mwanawasa from First Minister Rhodri Morgan.
(more…)

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