Solar Will Beat Oil
(Page 2 of 2)
September 3, 2008
By Steve Maxwell
Turn Up the Heat
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There’s also a lot of potential for utility-scale solar projects. Large, solar power plants are already in operation, some using photovoltaics and others using solar thermal technologies, which generate electricity using heat.
A lot has to change before significant amounts of solar electricity are available on the grid, but a lot will change. Besides the job of building new solar power plants, there’s the issue of building transmission lines to deliver that power from the sunny regions of the continent where solar electricity can be generated on a large scale.
There’s also the matter of land prices. Where I live there are thousands of acres of flat, bare limestone prairies punctuated by small patches of good farmland. As you’d expect, the limestone “wastelands” are almost worthless right now. But imagine a world where a solar array was as financially lucrative as a coal-fired electrical plant. What better place to build a solar power plant than on a landscape where you can bolt your equipment down to a ready-made bedrock foundation that never gets muddy and never grows grass?
Enough total solar energy shines on the earth during a 40-minute period of time to power the entire world economy for a year. We only need to harness a tiny portion of this sunshine to make a huge difference in the world: environmentally, politically and economically.
For more information on solar power, read Solar Power Could Provide 10 Percent of U.S. Electricity by 2025, Solar Cell Sets World-Record Conversion Efficiency, Easy Solar Power and 970 Trillion kWh of Energy Every Day.
Do you have plans for installing a PV system? How long do you think it will take before solar power provides half of our electricity needs? Share your thoughts in the comments section below.
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