Talal Al-Khatib
Before solar road panels are installed on major highways, they need a significantly smaller road test to prove the concept.
SOURCE: www.discovery.com
Solar Roadways is a company with an ambitious vision for a new energy future: to replace all concrete and asphalt surfaces, including the 4 million miles of roads and streets in the United States,
with solar road panels. The plan would effectively transform our
country’s entire transportation network into one massive power plant.
If immediately implemented, an entirely unrealistic prospect even by
the company’s own admission, with commercially produced solar panels
available today, the resulting energy savings gained from not burning
fossil fuels could cut the nation’s greenhouse gas emissions in half, according to Solar Roadways projections.
And best of all, by simultaneously replacing our crumbling roads and
deteriorating power grid, the system would even eventually pay for
themselves, according to Solar Roadways.
It’s easy to get carried away when faced with an idea as potentially
game changing as solar road panels. But how well do solar road panels
really stack up when reality crashes into theory?
The Big Idea
Solar road panels are made with layers of super-strong glass embedded
with photovoltaic cells, electrical wiring and LED lights, which can be
used to create signs on the surface directing traffic or alerting
motorists to hazardous conditions.
When connected between highways, residential streets, parking lots
and driveways, the system of solar panels not only creates a vast,
power-collecting network; it also creates a system of delivery that
would eliminate the need for above-ground wires and dramatically reduce
instances of widespread power failures.
According to Scott Brusaw, co-founder of Solar Roadways, a single mile of solar road panels would be enough to power 428 homes. And that’s assuming there are only four hours of sunlight in a day.
Not So Fast
So what’s holding policymakers and industry leaders from getting behind this idea?
Carrying it to the most ambitious goal put forward by Solar Roadways,
namely replacing all paved surfaces within the United States with solar
road panels, also isn’t cheap. In fact, it would cost, according to one
estimate — brace yourself — $34.5 trillion, according to TreeHugger’s Lloyd Alter.
That’s more than twice the gross domestic product of the United States
for 2011. By comparison, the cost of building coal-fired power plants
producing the same amount of electricity would be about $14 trillion, according to AZoNano.com.
That’s a large investment for a concept that’s still unproven.
Although the Department of Energy gave Solar Roadways a $100,000 to
develop a prototype, there are still many questions to be answered: Can
the solar road panels delivery the kind of energy that would make them
cost-efficient? Would the roads be able to support load of the constant
flow of traffic day after day, year after year? Would the glass surfaces
create any issues for drivers at high speeds in adverse weather
conditions?
A Parking Lot Prototype
Before solar road panels are installed on major highways, they need a significantly smaller road test to prove the concept.
Earlier this year, the Department of Energy awarded Solar Roadways a $750,000 grant, as reported by TreeHugger.
That gives the company the funding to build a prototype about the size
of a parking lot, which will provide researchers with a constant stream
of data to understand how well the idea works in the field.
SOURCE: www.discovery.com
No comments:
Post a Comment
Please leave a comment if you can.