The Carbon Trust yesterday announced it is to invest £5m as part of a new
research and development programme designed to make solar photovoltaic (pv)
cells cost effective within the next decade.
The project, which will be run by the University of Cambridge and technology
development firm The Technology Partnership, aims to improve the efficiency and
manufacturing processes for organic solar PV technologies – a potentially highly
efficient and light weight variety of solar cell that relies on organic dyes to
absorb light.
"We believe this exciting new organic PV technology is our best shot at
dramatically reducing the cost of solar PV to the point that, in the next ten
years, it could become as cheap as the power currently delivered to our homes,"
said Tom Delay, chief executive of
The Carbon Trust. "It is
because the carbon savings and commercial potential for this technology are so
vast that we have acted now to take a good, but expensive idea and turn it into
a cost effective, easily available reality."
While advocates of solar power argue that it represents the largest available
renewable energy source, the high cost of manufacturing and installing solar
panels has stifled the market's development. Some firms that have installed
solar panels have complained that they have had to replace the panels just as
they have begun to cover their initial investment.
The main focus of the new research will be on improving the cost
effectiveness of the technology by attaining five percent conversion efficiency
levels, extending the lifetime for panels to over five years, and developing
cheaper manufacturing processes.
The development of sheets of PV film, made from a polymer base, will also
extend the number of potential sites for solar panels, making it easier for
firms to install the technology on roofs and even windows.
The Carbon Trust said the project should also help bolster the UK's position
in the global solar energy market and add further impetus to the alternative
energy hub currently developing around the Cambridge area.
Sir Richard Friend, Cavendish Professor of Physics in the University of
Cambridge, welcomed the investment claiming it would help "capitalise on the
local Cambridge strengths in taking science to manufacturing."
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