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Solar Panels Are Starting to Die, Leaving Behind Toxic Trash – ‘Tricky to recycle. As oldest ones expire, get ready for a solar e-waste glut’
Climate Depot ^ | August 22, 2020

Posted on 08/31/2021 8:57:21 PM PDT by george76

Solar panels are an increasingly important source of renewable power that will play an essential role in fighting climate change. They are also complex pieces of technology that become big, bulky sheets of electronic waste at the end of their lives—and right now, most of the world doesn’t have a plan for dealing with that.

But we’ll need to develop one soon, because the solar e-waste glut is coming. By 2050, the International Renewable Energy Agency projects that up to 78 million metric tons of solar panels will have reached the end of their life, and that the world will be generating about 6 million metric tons of new solar e-waste annually. While the latter number is a small fraction of the total e-waste humanity produces each year, standard electronics recycling methods don’t cut it for solar panels. Recovering the most valuable materials from one, including silver and silicon, requires bespoke recycling solutions. And if we fail to develop those solutions along with policies that support their widespread adoption, we already know what will happen.

“If we don’t mandate recycling, many of the modules will go to landfill,” said Arizona State University solar researcher Meng Tao, who recently authored a review paper on recycling silicon solar panels, which comprise 95 percent of the solar market.

Solar panels are composed of photovoltaic (PV) cells that convert sunlight to electricity. When these panels enter landfills, valuable resources go to waste. And because solar panels contain toxic materials like lead that can leach out as they break down, landfilling also creates new environmental hazards.

Most solar manufacturers claim their panels will last for about 25 years, and the world didn’t start deploying solar widely until the early 2000s. As a result, a fairly small number of panels are being decommissioned today. PV Cycle, a nonprofit dedicated to solar panel take-back and recycling, collects several thousand tons of solar e-waste across the European Union each year, according to director Jan Clyncke. That figure includes solar panels that have reached the end of their life but also those that were decommissioned early because they were damaged during a storm, had some sort of manufacturing defect, or got replaced with a newer, more efficient model.

When solar panels reach their end of their life today, they face a few possible fates. Under EU law, producers are required to ensure their solar panels are recycled properly. In Japan, India, and Australia, recycling requirements are in the works. In the United States, it’s the Wild West: With the exception of a state law in Washington, the US has no solar recycling mandates whatsoever. Voluntary, industry-led recycling efforts are limited in scope. “Right now, we’re pretty confident the number is around 10 percent of solar panels recycled,” said Sam Vanderhoof, the CEO of Recycle PV Solar, one of the only US companies dedicated to PV recycling. The rest, he says, go to landfills or are exported overseas for reuse in developing countries with weak environmental protections.

Even when recycling happens, there’s a lot of room for improvement. A solar panel is essentially an electronic sandwich. The filling is a thin layer of crystalline silicon cells, which are insulated and protected from the elements on both sides by sheets of polymers and glass. It’s all held together in an aluminum frame. On the back of the panel, a junction box contains copper wiring that channels electricity away as it’s being generated.

At a typical e-waste facility, this high-tech sandwich will be treated crudely. Recyclers often take off the panel’s frame and its junction box to recover the aluminum and copper, then shred the rest of the module, including the glass, polymers, and silicon cells, which get coated in a silver electrode and soldered using tin and lead. (Because the vast majority of that mixture by weight is glass, the resultant product is considered an impure, crushed glass.) Tao and his colleagues estimate that a recycler taking apart a standard 60-cell silicon panel can get about $3 for the recovered aluminum, copper, and glass. Vanderhoof, meanwhile, says that the cost of recycling that panel in the US is between $12 and $25—after transportation costs, which “oftentimes equal the cost to recycle.” At the same time, in states that allow it, it typically costs less than a dollar to dump a solar panel in a solid-waste landfill.

“We believe the big blind spot in the US for recycling is that the cost far exceeds the revenue,” Meng said. “It’s on the order of a 10-to-1 ratio.”

If a solar panel’s more valuable components—namely, the silicon and silver—could be separated and purified efficiently, that could improve that cost-to-revenue ratio. A small number of dedicated solar PV recyclers are trying to do this. Veolia, which runs the world’s only commercial-scale silicon PV recycling plant in France, shreds and grinds up panels and then uses an optical technique to recover low-purity silicon. According to Vanderhoof, Recycle PV Solar initially used a “heat process and a ball mill process” that could recapture more than 90 percent of the materials present in a panel, including low-purity silver and silicon. But the company recently received some new equipment from its European partners that can do “95 plus percent recapture,” he said, while separating the recaptured materials much better.

Some PV researchers want to do even better than that. In another recent review paper, a team led by National Renewable Energy Laboratory scientists calls for the development of new recycling processes in which all metals and minerals are recovered at high purity, with the goal of making recycling as economically viable and as environmentally beneficial as possible. As lead study author Garvin Heath explains, such processes might include using heat or chemical treatments to separate the glass from the silicon cells, followed by the application of other chemical or electrical techniques to separate and purify the silicon and various trace metals.

“What we call for is what we name a high-value, integrated recycling system,” Heath told Grist. “High-value means we want to recover all the constituent materials that have value from these modules. Integrated refers to a recycling process that can go after all of these materials, and not have to cascade from one recycler to the next.”

In addition to developing better recycling methods, the solar industry should be thinking about how to repurpose panels whenever possible, since used solar panels are likely to fetch a higher price than the metals and minerals inside them (and since reuse generally requires less energy than recycling). As is the case with recycling, the EU is out in front on this: Through its Circular Business Models for the Solar Power Industry program, the European Commission is funding a range of demonstration projects showing how solar panels from rooftops and solar farms can be repurposed, including for powering ebike charging stations in Berlin and housing complexes in Belgium.

Recycle PV Solar also recertifies and resells good-condition panels it receives, which Vanderhoof says helps offset the cost of recycling. However, both he and Tao are concerned that various US recyclers are selling second-hand solar panels with low quality control overseas to developing countries. “And those countries typically don’t have regulations for electronics waste,” Tao said. “So eventually, you’re dumping your problem on a poor country.”

For the solar recycling industry to grow sustainably, it will ultimately need supportive policies and regulations. The EU model of having producers finance the take-back and recycling of solar panels might be a good one for the U.S. to emulate. But before that’s going to happen, US lawmakers need to recognize that the problem exists and is only getting bigger, which is why Vanderhoof spends a great deal of time educating them.

“We need to face the fact that solar panels do fail over time, and there’s a lot of them out there,” he said. “And what do we do when they start to fail? It’s not right throwing that responsibility on the consumer, and that’s where we’re at right now.”


TOPICS: Business/Economy; News/Current Events
KEYWORDS: 1solaristhefuture; 2getusedtoit; bigbob; climatechange; disposal; electricity; globalwarming; globalwarminghoax; greennewdeal; paneldisposal; solar; solarpanel; solarpanels; solarpower; solarwaste; toxic; toxicwaste; waste
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1 posted on 08/31/2021 8:57:21 PM PDT by george76
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To: george76

They should be ground up and formed into suppositories for insertion into our politicians.


2 posted on 08/31/2021 9:05:01 PM PDT by SpaceBar
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To: george76

I know China doesn’t want those discards anymore.
They are full up on Americas non-recyclable recyclables after decades of absorbing it all.


3 posted on 08/31/2021 9:11:47 PM PDT by lee martell
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To: george76

They once said the same thing about cars, because you coudn’t grind them up to make dog food from.

Solar is the future. Get used to it.


4 posted on 08/31/2021 9:11:47 PM PDT by bigbob
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To: george76

Those and windmill blades.

Looks like”green” energy ain’t so green after all.


5 posted on 08/31/2021 9:12:18 PM PDT by metmom (...fixing our eyes on Jesus, the Author and Perfecter of our faith….)
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To: george76

so wind and now solar equipment cannot be recycled...short-sighted unintended consequences now get wished into the desert.


6 posted on 08/31/2021 9:15:08 PM PDT by stylin19a (When in doubt...empty the magazine.)
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To: george76

The law of unintended(?) consequences


7 posted on 08/31/2021 9:15:11 PM PDT by Impala64ssa (Virtue signalling is no virtue)
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To: SpaceBar

This is garbage. Solar panels. Photovoltaics. Don’t go bad


8 posted on 08/31/2021 9:30:41 PM PDT by Truthoverpower (Arizona !!!! Now the TRUMP TRAIN is getting back on TRACK ! TRUTH! FREEDOM ! LIBERTY! I could )
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To: george76

They got lucky. The first ones I bought on my off grid place lasted 1 year, Down 70% already. In to the landfill they went.


9 posted on 08/31/2021 9:35:39 PM PDT by Organic Panic (Democrats. Memories as short as Joe Biden's eyes.)
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To: Truthoverpower

>> This is garbage. Solar panels. Photovoltaics. Don’t go bad

Actually, they do - according to my buddy who is an engineer at the power company. “They slowly and constantly degrade in their watt-hour output, and are essentially useless at the 17 year point.”


10 posted on 08/31/2021 9:52:17 PM PDT by QBFimi (It is not your responsibility to finish the work of perfecting the world... Tarfon)
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To: george76

They still use Lead solder? What mixture - 60/40, 80/20 or 95/5 and what are the other metals in a roll of solder?

The article is pretty good esp. for beginners who know little about Solar Panel recycling or burials.

I think we can do better in salvaging the metals before the rest goes into a landfill. PERHAPS the Republicans should propose a moratorium on putting up more/new solar panels until a solution is at hand. Just turning their environmental crap rhetoric back on them.

I’m a nuclear power fan myself. Doesn’t kill millions of birds a year, pollute landfills, and ensures a steady supply of power in all weather if the transmission lines/poles are kept in good condition.

Forget “the myths of Four Mile Island” re the movie “The China Syndrome”. Chernobyl was a more realistic disaster and maybe the Japanese Fukiyama disaster.

We have learned from them.


11 posted on 08/31/2021 9:56:31 PM PDT by MadMax, the Grinning Reaper
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To: george76

Green energy has always been a fool’s errand.


12 posted on 08/31/2021 10:00:43 PM PDT by wjcsux (RIP Rush Limbaugh 12 Jan 1951- 17 Feb 2021. We really miss you. 😢)
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To: george76

““If we don’t mandate recycling, many of the modules will go to landfill,” said Arizona State University solar researcher Meng Tao, who recently authored a review paper on recycling silicon solar panels, which comprise 95 percent of the solar market.”

If that is what “experts” are saying, then obviously they are not worth recycling at this time.


13 posted on 08/31/2021 10:08:22 PM PDT by fireman15
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To: george76

” Tao and his colleagues estimate that a recycler taking apart a standard 60-cell silicon panel can get about $3 for the recovered aluminum, copper, and glass. Vanderhoof, meanwhile, says that the cost of recycling that panel in the US is between $12 and $25—after transportation costs, which “oftentimes equal the cost to recycle.” At the same time, in states that allow it, it typically costs less than a dollar to dump a solar panel in a solid-waste landfill.”

Obviously, the government needs to make up this shortfall by increasing the volume. Why waste millions when you can waste billions.


14 posted on 08/31/2021 10:12:45 PM PDT by fireman15
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To: SpaceBar

They should be ground up and formed into suppositories for insertion into our politicians.
= = =

Grinding them up and forming costs money and time.

Just insert them whole.


15 posted on 08/31/2021 10:14:29 PM PDT by Scrambler Bob (My /s is more true than your /science (or you might mean /seance))
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To: metmom

But, but muh Gaia!


16 posted on 08/31/2021 10:39:51 PM PDT by Salamander (We're Pain, We're Steel, A Plot Of Knives....)
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To: george76; All
Wow, these guys are smart, ain’t they. Most of us knew this 10 years ago. Since nukes are out of the question, just start sending the panels to Yucca Mtn…. Of toss them over the side into the Grand Canyon. Even China and India ain’t taking as much of our crap as they did in the past.

(Semi sarcasm here, but I made my point)

17 posted on 08/31/2021 11:03:17 PM PDT by Cobra64 (Common sense isn’t common anymore.)
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To: george76

Not saying there isn’t prudence in energy diversification -

BUT, there does exist an element of humor in all these insane global socialist environmental weenies.

Thank you Gorbechev, for your San Francisco Presidio based, and Geneva based, socialist, “Global Initiative”, bringing us all the global warming/climate change propaganda architecture and Marxist UN effort, from the Rio Summit, all the way to the Paris Climate Accord. //S


18 posted on 08/31/2021 11:10:54 PM PDT by patriotfury ((May the fleas of a thousand camels occupy mo' ham mads tents!) )
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To: bigbob

It will no doubt play a part. But it can’t supply ALL the needs.


19 posted on 09/01/2021 12:42:33 AM PDT by Jacob Kell
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To: george76

Climate change do look over here


20 posted on 09/01/2021 3:34:49 AM PDT by ronnie raygun
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