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The New Green Energy Economy Dr. Ryne P. Raffaelle Vice President for Research and Associate Provost Rochester Instit

The New Green Energy Economy Dr. Ryne P. Raffaelle Vice President for Research and Associate Provost Rochester Institute of Technology & Former Director of the National Center for Photovoltaics at the National Renewable Energy Lab.

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The New Green Energy Economy Dr. Ryne P. Raffaelle Vice President for Research and Associate Provost Rochester Instit

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  1. The New Green Energy Economy Dr. Ryne P. Raffaelle Vice President for Research and Associate Provost Rochester Institute of Technology & Former Director of the National Center for Photovoltaics at the National Renewable Energy Lab

  2. The New Green Energy Economy is all about how we will meet the exponentially growing need for energy in a way that is sustainable.

  3. The word sustainability is derived from the Latin sustinere (tenere, to hold; sus, up). Dictionaries provide more than ten meanings for sustain, the main ones being to “maintain", "support", or "endure.”

  4. “Sustainable Development is development that meets the needs of the present without compromising the ability of future generations to meet their own needs.” Brundtland Commission of the United Nations on March 20, 1987.

  5. For development to be truly sustainable, requires that it be socially acceptable, environmentally friendly, and economically viable. More often than not, energy is the “long-pole” when it comes to sustainable development.

  6. “Access to environmentally and socially sustainable energy is essential to reduce poverty. Globally, over 1.4 billion people are still without access to electricity. About 3 billion use solid fuels — wood, charcoal, coal, and dung for cooking and heating.” – World Bank, 2011

  7. For every 1 American there are 3.9 people in India and 4.3 people in China who currently use a small fraction of the energy we do.

  8. 1931 “We are like tenant farmers chopping down the fence around our house for fuel when we should be using Nature's inexhaustible sources of energy — sun, wind and tide. ... I'd put my money on the sun and solar energy. What a source of power! I hope we don't have to wait until oil and coal run out before we tackle that.” Thomas Edison, in conversation with Henry Ford and Harvey Firestone as quoted in Uncommon Friends : Life with Thomas Edison, Henry Ford, Harvey Firestone, Alexis Carrel & Charles Lindbergh (1987) by James Newton, p. 31

  9. Fastest growing sector in the energy market is renewables, but we have a very long way to go!

  10. ~16% of global final energy consumption comes from renewables - 10% traditional biomass, 3.4% hydroelectricity, 2.8% new renewables (small hydro, modern biomass, wind, solar, geothermal, and biofuels). REN 21, Renewable Energy Policy Network for the 21st Century

  11. Renewable energy is energy which comes from natural resources such as sunlight, wind, rain, tides, and geothermal heat, which are renewable (naturally replenished).

  12. Roughly 4.6 billion years ago . . . “Let there be light”

  13. What a source of power indeed… The amount of sunlight that hits the Earth's surface in one hour is enough to power the entire world for a year!

  14. 1839Edmund Becquerel discovers the photovoltaic effect. 1860 - 1881AugusteMouchout was the first man to patent a design for a motor running on solar energy.

  15. 1872 John Ericsson's developed his “Sun Motor.”

  16. 1940 Russell Ohl discovers the “p-n junction” 1941 Russell Ohl receives a US Patent 2402662, "Light sensitive device"

  17. 1954 AT&T Bell Labs unveils it new “solar battery” developed by Gerald Pearson, Daryl Chapin, and Calvin Fuller which was the first modern silicon solar cell.

  18. 1950’s

  19. The U.S. has the best solar energy resource of any major industrialized nation on the Earth. Average insolation kWh/m2/day

  20. 10% 20% 30% 40% 3.6 TW US Consumption

  21. PV Costs and Production

  22. PV prices have been in free-fall over past couple of years. • Large differences in utility scale versus commercial rooftop and residential. • Reasons: • Efficiency Increases • Economies of Scale • Increased Competition

  23. 23,889 MW Worldwide PV production grew by > 100% in 2010!

  24. ~ 80% of PV production is in Asia ~ 80% of deployment is in Europe

  25. Industry Trends

  26. Current U.S. Solar Energy Production

  27. Solar Advisor Model with real inputs (i.e.,  South facing, 25 degree fixed tilt,4.3 kW DC system size, Local, state, and federal incentives as of October 2010, and the PV system financed as part of a 30 year home loan)

  28. 25 Year 80% BOL warrantees are the industry standard. <1% degradation/year Arrays installed after 2000 have been much more reliable, especially in the case of thin films.

  29. Building Integrated Photovoltaics 85kW Shell Solar CIGS in Wales 216 Würth CIGS modulesin Tübingen, Germany In Southern California

  30. Concentrating Photovoltaics Inverted Metamorphic III-V Solar Cell > 40% Efficient

  31. Maricopa Solar | Maricopa County, Arizona (Near Phoenix) | Salt River Project (SRP) 1.5MW | Total of 60 SunCatcher™ Power Systems. Operating since January 2010.

  32. Roll-to-roll Thin Films

  33. Markup on all materials (module, inverter, BoS) included in ‘Installer Overhead & Profit’ • Residential $0.89/WDC, Commercial $0.55, Utility (fixed) $0.31 • Reflects inventory costs (interest during construction), contingency

  34. Energy Storage can be achieved in a wide variety of ways including: compressed air, batteries, hydrogen, and flywheels.

  35. Concentrated Solar Thermal

  36. Pumped hydro energy storage

  37. The rechargeable battery market has grown 6 fold over the past 20 years. Li ion batteries have been the fastest growing part of that sector.

  38. All Electric Vehicles from China

  39. The Hydrogen Economy

  40. “We do not inherit the earth, we borrow it from our children”

  41. Thank You

  42. Happy 50th Dr. Raffaelle

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