Laura Isensee, PlanetArk 4 Nov 09;
LOS ANGELES - Even as solar companies cook up high tech ways to cut costs, the next push to make the renewable energy source more economical could come from workers who bolt panels onto rooftops and mount them across empty fields.
So far, panels -- a system's most expensive piece -- account for the biggest drop in the total cost, falling more than 50 percent from about $4.20 a watt in 2008.
Most U.S. and European makers are now selling panels near $2 per watt, while some low-cost Chinese players sell panels at about $1.85, said J.P. Morgan research analyst Christopher Blansett, while thin film maker First Solar Inc is the cost leader at about $1.50 or $1.55 per watt.
That decline has put a spotlight on installation, which now makes up a greater share of the total cost, and has prompted installers, developers and even panel makers to look for low-tech tricks, like quick fasteners and predrilled holes.
"There's no rocket science. It's literally doing things better and more efficiently," Blansett said.
After the shiny blue and black solar panels leave the factory, technicians have to bolt the panels into steel or aluminum frames, mount them to rooftops or across fields, connect them to inverters and string the wiring to feed electricity to homes, businesses or a power grid.
The big challenge for installers is that "there is no single item that moves the needle," said Lyndon Rive, chief executive at SolarCity. The privately held company designs, installs and finances systems for homes and businesses in California, Arizona and Oregon.
"It's doing one thousand little things better," Rive said, such as managing inventory so crews don't make extra trips to a hardware store.
INSTALL COSTS TO DROP
The U.S. solar market is on track to grow 35 to 45 percent in 2009 and reach about 460 to 500 megawatts, said Alfonso Velosa, a research director at Gartner.
Residential systems are expected to remain about a third of the total U.S. market this year, Velosa added.
While companies like SunPower Corp and Suntech Power Holdings Co Ltd are working on cutting-edge technology to make more efficient solar cells, Velosa said they are "starting to hit the limits of what the materials can do."
The solar sector leans on government incentives to compete with traditional power sources, but industry experts believe it will be economically viable in the near future.
Toward that goal, installation costs could drop 5 to 15 percent next year, executives from Suntech, Solon and other companies said at the Solar Power International conference last week in Anaheim, California.
Akeena Solar Inc sees even more promise, with its roadmap to cut installation costs by more than half in 2010.
Akeena's new Andalay branded panels have built-in micro-inverters to convert the direct current electricity produced by solar panels into alternating current rather than requiring a separate unit, as most systems do.
Heavyweight panel makers have also gone back to the drawing board to design products so more work that used to happen at the construction site is done in the factory.
Solon and Suntech both recently launched new systems for the U.S. utility market that the companies say shave time and money off the installation costs.
U.S. based SunPower Corp and Energy Conversion Devices have also introduced new products to make rooftop work easier.
"If you have to have to weld something or construct something (in the field), it's quite expensive," said Olaf Koester, chief executive at Solon's U.S. unit.
Koester cited Solon's new Velocity system, which uses built-in rails instead of a frame, as an example of a design that streamlines the installation work.
Companies that install solar systems are also moving to more standard systems instead of customizing each site, which takes time and money and can create new problems every time.
"We almost used to pride ourselves on all the custom work we did. But it's too expensive. We need to be able to compete with the retail price of electricity," said Mike Hall, chief executive at privately held Borrego Solar Systems Inc.
(Editing by Gary Hill)
Solar Companies Focus On Nuts And Bolts To Cut Costs
posted by Ria Tan at 11/04/2009 07:30:00 AM
labels global, solar-energy