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January 18, 2009

Not so Green Solar Energy

Otis A. Glazebrook IV
You think solar electrical generation is going to save you or the Planet? Think again.

While it is true that photovoltaic solar panels do not pollute while they are producing electricity -- what about the manufacturing process? What happens when these panels reach the end of their projected lifecycle in twenty-five years? (This is, by the way, an optimistic view of their useful life.)

Those questions are addressed in a study by the watchdog group Silicon Valley Toxics Coalition.

"Green Power" is being hyped as the "Safe Solution."  It is anything but safe -- when all factors are considered.

Here is a partial list (eight of fifty) of chemicals associated with solar photovoltaic (PV) manufacturing and disposal:









Compare this with the byproducts of Coal combustion from the Coal Utilization Byproduct Research:

Each year, the U.S. electric utility industry generates about 100 million tons of coal combustion byproducts. Just over half of this amount is fly ash (a talcum-like solid in the flue gas from a coal-fired boiler), approximately one-fourth is sludge from wet flue gas scrubbers, another 16 percent is boiler ash (a heavier, coarser solid removed from the bottom of a boiler), and about 7 percent is boiler slag (a hard, glassy material made from boiler ash that has been melted by the heat of the combustor).

Currently only about a third of this coal ash and just over one fourth of the scrubber waste is recycled in commercially beneficial uses. The largest amount is fly ash that is typically used as a Portland cement replacement in concrete and concrete products. The remainder, more than 70 million tons a year, is disposed of in impoundments and landfills.

Many experts believe the coal combustion byproducts represent a vastly underused resource. Combustion byproducts can strengthen construction materials and reduce overall product costs. The gypsum-rich byproducts of flue gas scrubbers can provide plants with nutrients and enhance depleted soils in various agricultural applications. Coal combustion byproducts can be used to immobilize hazardous wastes for safer disposal.

Greater use of coal combustion byproducts can also help reduce concerns over greenhouse gases. Using fly ash for cement making, for example, reduces the need for limestone calcination, a process that requires a large amount of heat typically provided by burning fossil fuels. For every ton of fly ash used in concrete, approximately 0.8 tons of carbon dioxide would be prevented from being released into the atmosphere."

Notice how the "Green Solutions" always seem to create more problems and pollution than they could ever be expected to solve?

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