With rapidly increasing global module production volumes, managing the environmental footprint of PV module manufacturing has taken on great urgency. Solar energy's supporters and detractors alike readily acknowledge the potential environmental and public-health risks that manufacturing can pose.
Myths, misinformation and corporate opacity, however, often interfere with honest dialogue about the problem and investigation into possible solutions. In its newly released 2011 Solar Scorecard, nonprofit organization Silicon Valley Toxics Coalition (SVTC) brings concrete data points and rankings into the discussion.
The scorecard rates the world's major PV module manufacturing players on four "green manufacturing" criteria: product takeback and recycling, worker health and safety issues at PV facilities and in the supply chain, chemical use and lifecycle analysis, and company disclosure statements.
All scores are based on manufacturers' responses to a survey from SVTC. Although 40 firms were asked to participate, only 15 responded - perhaps a telling survey finding in itself when a primary emphasis is on transparency and accountability.
Overall, Germany-based crystalline PV module manufacturer SolarWorld took the No. 1 spot, with an overall score of 91 out of 100. The company received top marks for product takeback and recycling, as well as for supply chain and green jobs.
In its survey responses, SolarWorld garnered points for such environmentally friendly actions as sending its returned modules to a third-party recycling facility, prohibiting the export of end-of-life modules from developed countries to developing countries, and conducting audits to monitor its supply chain for environmental and health issues. The company also stated that its does not use prison labor for production or recycling.
SolarWorld lost several points in SVTC's chemical-use and lifecycle-analysis category for using lead in its products. The company was far from the only lead-user; SVTC found that only two of 15 respondents manufacture modules that are free of both lead and cadmium - two notoriously toxic materials closely associated with PV manufacturing.
More encouragingly, the report found that all five of the manufacturers that have undergone the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency's Toxicity Characteristic Leaching Procedure passed the test. However, of the three manufacturers that took a comparable California test, one failed both of the test's portions, and the remaining two each failed one portion.
Behind SolarWorld, China-headquartered Trina Solar placed second in the manufacturer rankings, with a score of 89. The company was followed by Norway-based REC, Arizona-based First Solar and Colorado-based Abound Solar, which each earned a score of 87. SunPower (85 points), Solon (84), Sovello (83), Calyxo (82) and Yingli Solar (72) rounded out the top 10.
SVTC believes that based on the results of the scorecard, the industry still has time to establish a less toxic manufacturing and disposal footprint to complement PV's green electricity production. Based on the historical path of the electronics industry, however, that window of opportunity will soon be closing.
"The solar PV industry's rapid growth makes it critical to focus on industry innovation on reducing toxic materials use and on developing products that are easier and safer to recycle," the organization says. SVTC also called for the industry to build domestic recycling infrastructure that adheres to proximity principles.
The full Solar Scorecard, with sortable rankings and full survey responses from manufacturers, is available from SVTC here.
Showing posts with label SolarWorld. Show all posts
Showing posts with label SolarWorld. Show all posts
Monday, April 11, 2011
Wednesday, December 29, 2010
SolarWorld supplies Haitian Hospitals with PV Panels
SolarWorld is supplying five medical centers in Port-au-Prince, Haiti with 440 of its 230-watt Sunmodule PV panels to power equipment, refrigeration and air conditioning. The panels comprise the the third shipment SolarWorld has sent to the Haitian capital since it was struck by a catastrophic earthquake last January.
Preliminary site work at the clinics in La Colline, Arrondissement de Lascahobas, Thomonde, Petite Rivière and Verrettes is currently taking place prior to the mid-December arrival of the shipment, with installation expected to commence in spring.
"With the destruction of major medical facilities in Port-au-Prince, there is now greater reliance on rural health facilities. Some people have moved back to rural areas after the earthquake, resulting in a greater load on rural health centers and hospitals," said Robert Freling, executive director of Solar Electric Light Fund, the charitable organisation assisting SolarWorld with the project.
"The reliability of the clinics' power is absolutely critical. SolarWorld's panels offer the double benefit of providing clean, healthy power without fail for decades while also saving money otherwise spent buying scarce fuels and making machine repairs. In turn, the clinics apply the savings to answer the primary need: medical relief," Freling added.
“With its solar power modules, SolarWorld is contributing to a better and more reliable basic health-care system in the disaster area. Thanks to our local partners, the power systems can be installed without any undue delay,” said Dr. Frank Asbeck, SolarWorld's chairman and CEO.
Source: PV Tech
Sunday, October 24, 2010
J.R. Ewing Tips His Hat to Solar Power
Once upon a time in a TV land older than most people I know, there lived a prime time soap opera called Dallas. In this show lived a big-hat-wearing Texas oil tycoon named J.R. Ewing. Those of you who remember this egregious, womanizing, money-grubbing corporate captain of industry will get how amusing it is that the owner of Ewing Oil (then and now played by Larry Hagman) has come out of this oil well to promote solar power. The rest of you might want to search Wikipedia and then, perhaps,YouTube.
Hagman, who is probably more famous for playing Major Nelson on I Dream of Jeannie, is now a spokesman for SolarWorld. And he has resurrected the J.R. Ewing character to help illustrate that point. SolarWorld is based in Germany but has manufacturing plants in California and Oregon. The 500-megawatt plant in Oregon is currently the largest solar cell manufacturing facility in North America.
As for Larry Hagman/J.R. Ewing, he lives in Ojai, California on a veritable plantation. There he grows vegetables and some 200 avocado trees, and has already installed a 94-kilowatt solar power system. If you’re wondering how the former (if fictional) oil tycoon changed his tune to one of solar energy, know that this photovoltaic system has reduced his annual electric bill from $37,000 to just $13, according to the LA Times.
Hagman is starring in a new ad campaign for SolarWorld in which he will play off Sarah Palin’slaughable Drill, Baby, Drill exclamation by encouraging homeowners to “Shine, baby, shine.”
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