Student Project #20

by Richard Golz

PATHFINDER - BIBLIOGRAPHY

RESEARCH QUESTION:

How cost-effective is solar energy for home use?

INTRODUCTION

The cost of solar cells, which convert sunlight directly to electricity, has fallen more than 90 percent since 1980. The past few years have witnessed additional innovations signaling the emergence of solar energy in the home as a high-growth sector including:

(1) mass-produced solar generators that are cost-competitive with the most advanced fossil plants, and;

(2) rooftop solar panels and tiny fuel cells that allow people to generate their own electricity.

Estimates generally range from 10,000 - 30,000 new solar home systems worldwide curently being installed each year. More than 250,000 homes in developing countries already get their electricity from solar cells, and major corporations such as Siemens, Mitsubishi, Westinghouse, and Enron have announced investments in photovoltaics and advanced fuel cells.

Solar energy and photovoltaic (PV) technology have the potential to play an important role in the efforts to meet the combined global environmental and social challenges of development.

The Worldwatch Institute study projects solar, wind, and geothermal energy will grow rapidly in the early twenty-first century, while the use of coal and oil would fall by 73 and 20 percent respectively during the next 25 years.

Renewable Energy Economics

Solar PV systems were once prohibitively expensive solutions to energy needs. Over the past two decades there has been a 10-fold reduction in the delivered price of energy from PV systems. Small home-systems in developing nations typically supply 10 - 80 Wp at a cost of about $1.00/kWh. While this is still well above the costs of power from fossil-fuel plants there are reasons to be hopeful. The price of PV modules has decreased by roughly 20% for each doubling of the number of units produced (Williams and Terzian, 1993). PV is a 'flexible' technology where systems of many sizes can be easily constructed and very cheaply maintained to meet a range of power demands. (Arvidson, 1995). For example, the new United Solar low-cost solar panels capture sunlight with an efficiency of 10.2 percent. This new technology and increase in the power per unit cost could make solar energy a good alternative to traditional power. "The DOE predicts that the United Solar panels could bring the cost of photovoltaic power down to 12 to 16 cents per kilowatt-hour, less than half its current cost. Power companies usually now charge between six and 20 cents per kilowatt-hour for fossil fuel-generated electricity." (Beardsley).

In closing, if mass-produced solar panels can meet the standards of the United Solar prototypes, solar power could take its place as a standard auxiliary source of electricity.

 

GENERAL SEARCH WORKSHEET

CONCEPT #
Search Terms
1

Solar Energy

Solar Power

Renewable Energy

Photovoltaics

2

Cost

Cost Effectiveness

Affordable

Assessment

3

Home Construction

Home Use

Home Building

.

 

LIBRARY OF CONGRESS SUBJECT HEADINGS

Narrower Topic(s):  

Solar air condiioning

Solar cells

Solar collectors

Broader Topic(s):

Solar energy (909 items)

Renewable energy sources

Solar radiation

Call Number Range:

TJ809 - TJ812.8
DATABASE RESULTS

Britannica Online (accessed: )

Field

Search Results

Records (Hits)

INDEX

Solar energy or Renewable Energy or Photovoltaics

351

INDEX

 

cost effectiveness or affordable or cost

258

INDEX

 

home construction

94

Articles

 

solar energy and cost-affordable and home construction

2,962

 

Infotrac database: (accessed: )

Set #

Field

Search Terms (including operators, truncation, etc.)

Records (Hits)

R1

Solar energy or Renewable Energy or Photovoltaics

411

R2

cost effectiveness or affordable or cost

14167

R3

home construction or home building

48

R4

R1 and R2

29

PLANet Online Catalog (Peninsula Library System) (accessed: )

Field

Search Terms (no phrases in Planet)

Records (Hits)

1

(solar photovoltaic) (home house)

50

2

(solar photovoltaic) (home house) (cost afford?)

2

Online Catalog (Melvyl Catalog - UC) (accessed: )

Search Terms (including operators, truncation, etc.)

Database

Items (Hits)

subject Solar energy or Renewable Energy or Photovoltaics [and] language English

CAT

3295

subject cost effectiveness or affordable or cost [and] language English

CAT

11385

subject home construction or home building [and] language English

CAT

11

 

WilsonWeb databases:
Databases: (
General Science Abst ;Humanities Abstracts; Social Sciences Abst; Applied Sci&Technol Index)

Set Number

Search Terms (including operators, truncation, fields, etc.)

Records (Hits)

#1

photovoltaic or PV or solar energy or renewable energy (All Categories)

4539 Entries

#2

cost-effect* or cost effect* (All Categories )

2966 Entries

#3

#1 and #2

17 Entries

#4

smart house* (All Categories)

18 Entries

#5

home (in Subject only)

492 Entries

Databases: ( General Science Abst ;Humanities Abstracts; Social Sciences Abst; Applied Sci&Technol Index)

Set Number

Search Terms (including operators, truncation, fields, etc.)

Records (Hits)

#1

cost-effec* and photovoltaic (using SUBJECT/DESCRIPTOR only)

0

#2

cost-effec* and solar (using SUBJECT/DESCRIPTOR only)

15

Newspaper Indexes & Databases:

UMI Proquest

Search #

Search Terms

Results (Hits)

#1

TEXT (solar energy or renewable energy) AND TEXT (photovoltaic* or sustainable archi*) AND TEXT (cost effective or affordable) AND TEXT (home construction or house)

3

#2

TEXT (home construction or house)

0

#3

solar energy or renewable energy AND photovoltaic* or sustainable archi*

0

#4

SUB (solar energy or renewable energy) AND SUB (photovoltaic* or sustainable archi*) AND SUB (cost effective or affordable) AND SUB (home construction or house)

 0

 

 

#5

solar energy or renewable AND cost or affordable AND home or house

(in Basic Fields)

7

 

Lexis/Nexis Online Service: (accessed:)

Search Level

Search Request

Records (Hits)

1

hlead((solar energy or renewable or photovoltaic) w/10 (afford! or cost effect!)) 1st CONCEPT

52

2

hlead((solar energy or renewable or photovoltaic) and (afford! or cost effect!) and (construction) 2nd CONCEPT

3

 

Internet Web Directories & General Search Engines:

Yahoo (www.yahoo.com);

Metafind (www.metafind.com);

AltaVista (www.altavistacom);

InfoMine (www.infomine.com);

Uncover

Search Engine is METAFIND

(Hits)

search words used:

+"solar energy" +"construction"

Queries sent: PlanetSearch +"solar erergy" +"construction". Excite "solar energy" AND "construction:". AltaVista "solar energy" AND "construciton". InfoSeek +solar +energy +construction. WebCrawler "solar enrgy" AND "construction"

68 hits listed as SOLAR; 5 hits listed as ENERGY; 2 hits listed as CONSTRUCTION; 4 hits listed as OTHERS

Search Engine is AltaVista

search words used:

+"solar energy" +"affordable" +"smart hous*"

 

AltaVista found 8 Web pages

Search Engine is InfoSeek

search words used:

+"solar energy" and +"affordable" and "smart hous*"

100

Search Engine is UnCover

search words used:

+"solar energy" and +home

4643

+"solar energy" and +affordable

Keyword Search results = 1

Search Engine is Yahoo

search words used:

 

+"solar energy" +"home construction"

266

"solar energy" and affordabl*

7 Category Matches

solar energy

91336 Hits91336 Hits

Search Engine is InfoMine

search words used:

 

"soalr energy" (Queried Physical Sciences, Engineering, Computing & Math)

9

Search Engine is InfoSeek

+"solar energy" +afford*

104

 

Web Subject-Specific Database Search Engine:

Amazon Book Search:

Search

Records (Hits)

"solar energy" +"home construction"

11 hits

BIBLIOGRAPHY

Ameel, Timothy A., Kevin G. Gee and Byard D. Wood. "Performance Predictions of Alternative Low Cost Absorbents For Open-Cycle Absorption Solar Cooling." Solar Energy Feb 1995: 65+.

Arvidson, Anders. From Candles to Electric Light: Can Poor People Afford Solar Electricity?" December 1995 . Renewable Energy for Development.. < http://www.sei.se/red/red9512d.html>

Beardsley, Tim. "Hot Property: Solar Cells Make a Leap in Cost-Effectiveness." Aug. 26 1998. <http://www.mat.auckland.ac.nz/~king/Preprints/book/diversit/extra/renen.htm>

This website / magazine article deals with new inovations in the solar energy industry. The article describes the new United Solar low-cost solar panels which capture sunlight with an efficiency of 10.2 percent. This new technology and increase in the power per unit cost could make solar energy a good alternative to traditional power. It discusses the disadvantages that cost has on solar energy, and the use of new technologies that enable solar energy to be competitive - "The DOE predicts that the United Solar panels could bring the cost of photovoltaic power down to 12 to 16 cents per kilowatt-hour, less than half its current cost. Power companies usually now charge between six and 20 cents per kilowatt-hour for fossil fuel-generated electricity." In closing, if mass-produced solar panels can meet the standards of the United Solar prototypes, solar power could take its place as a standard auxiliary source of electricity.

Beattie, Donald A. History and Overview of Solar Heat Technologies. Cambridge, Mass. MIT Press, 1997.

This final volume in a series that has surveyed advances in solar energy research since the oil shock of the early 1970s provides a broad overview of the US solar thermal program. It summarizes the conclusions of each of the nine technical volumes in the series and offers lessons drawn from the program for future governmental efforts to foster specific technologies.

Berger, John J., Charging Ahead: The Business of Renewable Energy and What it Means for America. New York: Henry Holt and Company, 1997.

Berman, Daniel M. and John T. O'Connor. Who Owns the Sun? People, Politics, and the Struggle for a Solar Economy. White River Junction, Vermont. Chelsea Green Publishing Company, 1996.

Boer , Karl W. Advances in Solar Energy, Volume 12. Boulder, Colorado, American Solar Energy Society, 1998.

Brooks, Nancy Rivera. "Companies Give 'Green' Power the Green Light; Utilities: AirTouch, Patagonia and Toyota Seek to Enhance Their Image by Buying Electricity from Renewable Sources." The Los Angeles Times 27 Sept 1998: Business-Part D; 8+

Butti, Ken and John Perlin. A Golden Thread: 2500 Years of Solar Architecture and Technology. Palo Alto, CA: Cheshire Books, 1980.

Campbell-Howe , Becky. ASES 1998 Publications Catalog. Boulder, CO. American Solar Energy Society. Retrieved December 8, 1998 from the World Wide Web: http://www.sni.net/solar/pubcat/bsa.htm.

This website contains a brief review of "Buildings for a Sustainable America Case Studies" by of Burke Miller. The case studies of 18 building sites illustrate a variety of passive solar energy and energy efficient strategies. Covers small commercial buildings, tract homes, and custom homes that serve as successful examples of sustainable buildings throughout the U.S.

CEES Home. 2 March 1998. Princeton University Center for Energy & Environmental Studies. 28 November 1998. <http://www.princeton.edu/~cees/>

Clow, Michael, Derek Lovejoy and David Schwartzman. "Solar Energy is No Panacea for Ecological Limits on Economic Activity." Science & Society 62.2 (Summer 1998): 266+.

Davidson, Joel. The Solar Electric Home : A Photovoltaics How-to Handbook.. Ann Arbor, MI: Aatec Publishing, 1987.

Davidson, Miriam. "Arizona Builders Bring Solar Age to 'Our Town'." Christian Science Monitor 10 June 1996: 3+

Fonash, Stephen Joseph. "Energy Conversion: Major Energy-Conversion Devices and Systems: Solar Cells." Britannica CD 97. Encyclopedia Britannica Online, 1997.

Fowler Solar Electric, Inc. The Solar Electric Independent Home Book, Worthington, MA, Fowler Solar Electric Publishing, 1991.

Frei, Fritz. "Solar Gain" The Architectural Review Oct. 1996: 66-70.

Frolick, Skip, "Local Solar: Today's Sustainable Energy." San Diego Earth Times. June 1997. [Accessed 8 December 1998]. <http://www.sdearthtimes.com/et0697/et0697s3.html>.

Hullmann, H. Photovoltaik in Gebauden. Hanover, Germany: Ideenwettbewerb, 1994.

Humm, O. and P. Toggweiler, Photovoltaics & Architecture, Basel, Switzerland: Verlag ,1993.

Independent Energy Guide, White River Junction, VT: Chelsea Green Publishing Company, 1996.

Jones, David Lloyd. Architecture and the Environment: Bioclimatic Building Design , Woodstock, NY: The Overlook Press, 1998.

Kammen, Daniel. "Household Power in a New Light." Global Warming and the Third World . 20 June 1996. Climate Cyberlibrary. Climatic Research Unit Univ. of East Anglia. 06 Dec. 1998. <http://www.cru.uea.ac.uk/tiempo/floor0/archive/t20fig1.htm>

Kevin, Jeffrey, et al, Independent Energy Guide, White River Junction, VT: Chelsea Green Publishing Company, 1996.

Kiss, G. et al., Building-Integrated Photovoltaics. Washington, D.C.: US Dept. of Energy, National Renewable Energy Laboratory, 1993.

Kiss, G. et al., Building-Integrated Photovoltaics: A Case Study. Washington, D.C.: National Renewable Energy Laboratory, 1994.

Kiss, G. et al., Optimal BIPV Applications, Washington, D.C.: National Renewable Energy Laboratory, 1995.

Komp , Richard J. Practical Photovoltaics: Electricity from Solar Cells. 3rd edition. Ann Arbor, Mich. Aatec Pub., 1995

Leggett, Jeremy, ed. Climate Change and the Financial Sector: The Emerging Threat. The Solar Solution. Munich, Germany: Gerling Akademie, 1996.

McGavin, Harvey. "Solar Powered." Times Educational Supplement 29 August, 1997: 23.

Miller, Burke. Buildings for a Sustainable America Case Studies. Boulder, Colorado, American Solar Energy Society, 1997.

NREL, Photovoltaics in the Built Environment: A Design Guide for Architects and Engineers, DOE/GO-10097-436. Golden, Colorado: NREL, 1997.

Nye, David E. Consuming Power - A Social History of American Energies. Cambridge, Mass.: MIT Press, 1997.

Potts, Michael and Matt Scanlon. "The Future of Solar Is Now." Mother Earth News Summer 1995: 38+.

Proceedings of the IEA International Workshop, Mounting Technologies for Building Integrated PV Systems, Monchaltorf, Switzerland, 1992.

"PV Resource and Information Links." PV Power Resource Site Photovoltaics: Sustainable Power for the World." 10 November 1998. [Accessed 8 December 1998]. <http://www.pvpower.com/resources.html>.

Rev. of Advances in Solar Energy, Volume 12, by Karl W. Boer. ASES Reports April 1998: 2

Volume 12 discusses the power companies evaluation and deployment of solar energy and the technical and economical feasibilities of using solar. This volume emphasizes the lessons learned from these experiments, including successes and failures. This volume also focuses on use of solar cells (the most promising high-technology part of solar energy conversion). This is a technical resource for solar energy experts, industry professionals, educators and researchers who need the latest solar technology information.

 Rev. of Consuming Power - A Social History of American Energies, by David E. Nye. Jeffrey L. Meikle. <http://mitpress.mit.edu/book-home.tcl?isbn=0262140632>. Date Unknown. [Accessed 10 December 1998].

David Nye shows how the United States became the world's largest consumer of energy as a result of our cultural development, not necessarily a result of our technological development. In Consuming Power Nye looks at how peoples activities changed as new energy systems were constructed, from colonial to recent times. He also shows how, as American technology developed, people depended on power systems that were not easily changed.

Nye examines a sequence of "energy" systems that gained and then lost momentum in recent American history including water, steam and atomic power, electricity, the internal-combustion engine, and computerization.

He shows how each system became embedded in our society via hookups at home and work. The result is a social history of America as seen through the lens of energy consumption.

Rev. of Who Owns the Sun? People, Politics, and the Struggle for a Solar Economy, by Daniel Berman and John T. O'Connor. Publishers Weekly September 1997:

Schoen, A.J.N., ed., Novem /IEA Architectural Ideas Competition: Photovoltaics in the Built Environment - Book of Results, The Netherlands: Novem/Ecofys 1994.

Sick, F., and Erge, T., Photovoltaics in Buildings: A Design Handbook for Architects and Engineers, London: James & James Ltd., 1996.

Slater, Dashka. "Sunny Prospects: The US Warms Up to Solar Energy Again." Sierra May 1998: 28-3.

Strong, S., The Solar Electric House, White River Junction, Vermont: Chelsea Green, 1991.

"Variation of Incident Sunshine with Location in the US." The Electronic Universe Project [Accessed 8 December 1998]. University of Oregon Dept. of Physics. <http://zebu.uoregon.edu/1996/ph162/l6a.html>.

Wickelgren, Ingrid. "Sunup at Last for Solar? New Technology Powers a Surge in Investment. " Business Week, 24 July 1995: 84-86.

Williams, Anna Fay. The Handbook of Photovoltaic Applications, Building Applications and System Design Considerations. Atlanta, GA: Fairmont Press, 1986.

Wills, R. The Interconnection of PV Power Systems with the Utility Grid: An Overview for Utility Engineers, Albuquerque, NM. Sandia National Laboratories, 1994.