DOE 5-year plan to make solar energy cleaner
The end-of-life strategy and recycling cost reduction could help to make green hydrogen cleaner too. The US Department of Energy (DOE) has released a 5-year plan for shrinking the environmental impact of solar energy panels at the end of their lifespans and to half the cost of recycling them. The DEO released an action plan for the safe and responsible handling of photovoltaic (PV) solar panels. The action plan includes both the responsible and safe handling of end-of-life (EOL) materials that come from solar PV panels. As clean as solar energy may be in terms of its lack of greenhouse gases…
The end-of-life strategy and recycling cost reduction could help to make green hydrogen cleaner too.
The US Department of Energy (DOE) has released a 5-year plan for shrinking the environmental impact of solar energy panels at the end of their lifespans and to half the cost of recycling them.The DEO released an action plan for the safe and responsible handling of photovoltaic (PV) solar panels.
The action plan includes both the responsible and safe handling of end-of-life (EOL) materials that come from solar PV panels. As clean as solar energy may be in terms of its lack of greenhouse gases while generating electricity, in order to make this power truly clean, there must be an appropriate disposal strategy in place for when the materials have reached the end of their lifespan. The lifespan of the average PV panel is about thirty years. Though this renewable power has seen a gradual growth rate across several decades, it is estimated that about 70 percent of the systems currently in place were implemented within the last half decade.
According to a projection by the International Renewable Energy Agency, the cumulative end-of-life waste from PV panels in the US alone is expected to reach between 0.17 and 1 million tons by 2030. To compare, the US generates about 200 million tons of solid waste per year, not including materials that are composted and recycled.