Google – AFP, Veronique Dupont (AFP), 10 December 2013
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US
President Barack Obama speaks on his energy policies following a tour of
the
Copper Mountain Solar Project in Boulder City, Nevada on March 21, 2012
(AFP/File, Mandel Ngan)
|
New York —
Solar power, only a minuscule part of the energy mix in the United States, is
getting a boost from cheap panels, growing acceptance by large companies and
chances for homeowners to rent solar systems.
Analysts
expect a phenomenal growth for renewable solar power over the next two decades,
after huge gains in the past two years: 60 percent growth in 2012 and 30
percent on top of that this year.
Heavily
reliant on oil, natural gas, coal and nuclear, the United States only gets 12
percent of its power from renewables, of which solar is the smallest part, less
than one percent.
But the
sector is expanding faster than any. There's no question, says Charles Ebinger
of the Brookings Institution, that solar energy "will continue to grow
quite dramatically."
The US
Energy Information Administration predicts that photovoltaics -- the
semiconductor technology that converts sunlight into electricity -- will grow
11.6 percent a year through 2040.
On top of
that, it also predicts 3.6 percent annual growth for solar thermal energy,
which uses vapor from water heated by the sun to drive turbines.
By
comparison, wind power is expected to grow at two percent a year and geothermal
power at four percent a year.
Ebinger
attributes solar power's fast growth to a decrease in the price of photovoltaic
panels in a generously oversupplied market, making the energy source more
competitive with other types of renewable energy.
Additionally,
the possibility for homeowners to simply rent panels rather than purchasing
them has helped their popularity.
Around 55
percent of US demand for solar panels currently comes from power generating
companies.
Another 30
percent comes from businesses that have large buildings and massive rooftops
where installing solar systems for their own power makes sense.
This
includes companies like retail giant Walmart, and Google, which puts the panels
on top of its huge data centers.
The rest of
demand comes from the residential sector.
Network
links, battery storage still big challenges
Large
obstacles still dot the road forward for US solar energy.
Ebinger
said connecting solar power to existing electricity distribution networks
requires substantial investment.
Solar power
parks, built with thousands of panels in a single location to generate power, are
often located in sparsely populated areas such as the deserts of the American
southwest, far from industrial centers and household consumers.
Storage is
another problem, because batteries remain expensive and very large.
SolarCity,
the leading builder of solar electricity systems, is partnering with
electric-car maker Tesla Motors to improve solar power storage, especially for
private homes. Tesla's founder and chief executive, inventor Elon Musk, is
chairman of SolarCity.
Storage is
the key challenge.
"You
can rely around the clock on hydrocarbons, nuclear or even
hydroelectricity," said Morningstar analyst Stephen Simko. But "with
solar, when there is no sun there is no power."
Even if the
threat of global warming makes using alternative energies more crucial, Simko
said, on a purely economic basis, hydrocarbons are much cheaper and more
profitable to work with.
"There
is the issue of climate change, but if we are still talking about
economics," he said, solar "is much more expensive and
capital-intensive."
That is why
governments need to continue supporting the sector, said Simko.
"The
entire solar market in the US and rest of the world is based on tax credits and
subsidies."
California
is the largest producer of solar energy thanks to supportive legislation and
favorable tax set-ups, followed by Arizona and New Jersey.
Angelo
Zino, an analyst with S&P Capital IQ, expects that by the 2020s, solar
power will account for five percent of the electricity generated in the United
States.
And Ebinger
estimates that solar's growth could drive renewables to 20 percent of the
entire energy market by 2030-2035.
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