btownmeggy wrote:Aimless wrote:Did you know that the amount of CO2 produced during the manufacture of modern solar panels is greater that the amount that will be saved by the energy production of that panel over the panel's lifetime?
LINK?
Ack. This is turning into a more difficult question than I thought it would be, and I may be wrong, since I can't seem to find much in the way of statistics on current solar cell manufacture. I know it used to be the case, but solar cells have gotten more efficient, as has the industry.
Here's what I can find : depending on manufacturer, final cost for solar power runs about $5/Watt. Solar cells have a general life expectancy of about 5 years, and at best about 1/4th of that time is spent generating electricity at peak capacity. Call it 1/3rd to account for non-peak production as well.
This gives a total end user cost of around 34 cents per kilowatt hour over the lifetime of the solar cell. Compared with a total end user cost of around 10 cents per kilowatt hour for traditional power.
Unfortunately, here my numbers break down, and I can't verify the statistic I originally posed. The question is what is the production cost of a solar cell (as opposed to the end user cost), and what that production cost breaks down into. It used to be the case that the energy consumption during the manufacture process was on the order of the total lifetime output of the solar cell, but since I can't verify that that is true anymore, I'll retract my claim.
So, my apologies to unriggable. I jumped the gun on the solar power thing. Solar power is still horribly inefficient, but I can't prove that solar power isn't green.