Solar power’s environmental impact is of critical concern, especially in regards to water and land use. In California, Senator Dianne Feinstein is reintroducing the California Desert Protection Act. The legislation proposes to set aside new lands in the Mojave Desert for conservation, recreation, and other purposes. The “California Desert Protection Act of 2011” proposes the following:
- Create the Mojave Trails National Monument, protecting 941,000 acres of federal land.
- Create the Sand to Snow National Monument, encompassing 134,000 acres of federal land.
- Add adjacent lands to Joshua Tree National Park, Death Valley National Park, and the Mojave National Preserve.
- Protect nearly 76 miles of four important waterways.
- Designate five new wilderness areas.
- Designate approximately 250,000 acres of Bureau of Land Management wilderness areas near Fort Irwin.
An advantaged environmental footprint for systems, however, doesn’t just happen – it has to be strategically considered from concept to commercialization. For example, at the inception of both product design and manufacturing, engineers should take into account key environmental concerns – climate change, water use, habitat impact, and end of life recyclability. With the rapid deployments planned for solar, inclusion of sustainability factors in the product definition is absolutely critical to assure that clean energy is indeed “clean.”
Minimising land use
In addition to energy payback, one of the key metrics in measuring environmental impact is land use. With the increased efficiency offered by advanced solar technologies such as CPV, land use is optimized with minimal land coverage and disruption, protection of animal and flora ecosystems, flexibility of field layouts, and no use of water to produce electricity.
Increasing recycled content
As new products are developed, a minimum of 90% recyclability (we aimed for over 97% at SolFocus) with low levels of embodied green house gases should be minimum acceptable standards. Sustainable equipment is no longer a nice option, it is part of our day jobs as solar professionals. Optimized land use and best cradle?to?cradle model result in the highest level of environmental stewardship. Tracking technologies (again, CPV is one) are mounted on trackers (dual-axis for CPV) and follow the sun continuously throughout the day. As a result, energy production is higher and there is no permanent shadowing of the ground’s surface reducing the impact on the animal and plant ecosystems, including with proper planning minimal disruption of migratory wildlife patterns at an installation facility.
Reducing water use
New solar projects must reduce land erosion from continual water runoff in fixed patterns. Globally, nearly half of water withdrawals are for the production of electricity. Polysilicon, thin film and CPV systems, with the direct conversion of sunlight to electricity using photovoltaic cells, do not use water in the production of electricity as do most concentrating solar power (CSP) plants. Those technologies that use passive cooling as do the SolFocus CPV systems, use water only for panel cleaning and not for energy generation. With the growth of solar in the high solar resource regions of the world, which typically have limited water supply, this feature is very important in having a technology that does not consume precious natural resources.
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