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Solar Power System Guidance in Face of Extreme Weather, Tech Innovation, Rock-Bottom Prices


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Scientists at the National Renewable Energy Laboratory have laid out a cost-effective five-point plan to improve the reliability of solar panels in light of extreme weather, rapid innovation, and extremely competitive prices.

In a commentary piece published in the journal Nature, Dirk Jordan, Teresa Barnes, Nancy Haegel, and Ingrid Repins urge the solar industry to adopt stringent guidelines to ensure the technology installed today is built to last. Jordan is a senior reliability engineer, Barnes the group manager for materials reliability, Haegel the director of the Materials Science Center, and Repins a senior research fellow.

“It’s exciting that costs in solar have dropped so much that we get to look at challenges beyond up-front cost, like ensuring a useful project lifetime of decades,” Repins said.

“We have a choice to build solar systems that can provide reliable electricity even when we have extreme weather damaging the grid. Certifications, including education and utilizing the best practices for regional extreme weather, will pay for themselves with cost-saving electricity,” Jordan said.

New designs and materials are moving to market quicker than in the past, however, and durability testing must be accelerated, the scientists noted. While today’s solar technology has become more efficient, there is also little room for error. Extreme weather caused by climate change also poses a problem to solar panels, such as during a 2019 Texas storm when hailstones nearly 7 centimeters across shattered modules, the equivalent of powering 20,000 homes.

The researchers cautioned that existing vulnerabilities, if not proactively addressed, could slow the massive rollout of solar energy required to meet climate change goals and improve electricity reliability. To avoid that happening, the authors outlined these steps should be taken:

Learn more about photovoltaic research at NREL.

Article courtesy of National Renewable Energy Laboratory.


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