LONDON --
From stadiums in Brazil to a bank headquarters in Britain, architects
led by Norman Foster are integrating solar cells into the skin of
buildings, helping the market for the technology triple within two
years.
Sun-powered systems will top the stadia hosting 2014
FIFA World Cup football in Brazil. In Manchester, northern England, the
Co-operative Group Ltd. office has cells from Solar Century Holdings
Ltd. clad into its vertical surfaces.
The projects mark an effort by designers to adopt
building- integrated photovoltaics, or BIPV, where the power-generating
features are planned from the start instead of tacked on as an
afterthought. Foster and his customers are seeking to produce
eye-catching works while meeting a European Union directive that new
buildings should produce next to zero emissions after 2020.
“Building integrated solar in office buildings and
factories which generate energy consistently during daylight hours,
whilst not requiring additional expensive land space or unsightly
installations, is seen as the most obvious energy solution,” said Gavin
Rezos, principal of Viaticus Capital Ltd., an Australian corporate
advisory company that’s one of the private equity funds putting money
into the technology.
Growing Market
The market for solar laid onto buildings and into
building materials is expected to grow to $7.5 billion by 2015 from
about $2.1 billion, according to Accenture Plc, citing research from
NanoMarkets. Sales of solar glass are expected to reach as much as $4.2
billion by 2015, with walls integrating solar cells at $830 million.
About $1.5 billion is expected to be generated from solar tiles and
shingles.
The technology provides a respite
for solar manufacturers, opening the way for them to charge a premium
for products. Traditional solar panel prices have fallen 90 percent
since 2008 due to oversupply, cutting margins and pushing more than 30
companies including Q-Cells SE and a unit of Suntech Power Holdings Co.
into bankruptcy.
The industry is already well established in the U.S.,
where Dow Chemical Co., the country’s largest chemical maker by sales,
is selling in more than a dozen states solar shingles that look like
regular roofing material.
BASF SE also is developing products for the market.
The Santa Clara football stadium near San Francisco will have
three solar-array covered bridges, with a solar canopy built over a roof
terrace, generating their own power.
‘Tipping Point’
“We’re approaching a tipping point and at some point
in the future building integrated solar would be a must-have in the
design of any new and significant building,” said Mike Russell, managing
director of Accenture’s utilities group in London.
Solar technology has been installed onto the roof of
the Pituacu Stadium in Brazil, as well as its locker room and parking
canopies, as the nation prepares for the World Cup.
Viaticus has invested in Dyesol Ltd., which makes dyes
that mimic how plant leaves turn sunlight into energy. The dyes
increase the efficiency of solar cells and provide a product that’s
“highly desirable for all buildings, both new and refurbished,” said
Rezos.
Dyesol is working with Tata Steel Ltd. on ways of
incorporating its technology into steel roofing products for industrial
warehouses, said Richard Caldwell, its executive chairman. Pilkington
Group Ltd., a glass maker, plans to integrate the technology into
windows forming the sides of buildings, he said.
Private Equity
VantagePoint of San Bruno, California, and Scottish
Equity Partners are backing the efforts of Solar Century Holdings Ltd.
in the U.K. to blend solar-generating technology into roof tiles and
slates that can be used on homes, offices and architectural buildings.
It clad the vertical surfaces of the Co-operative Group’s building in
Manchester.
Incorporating solar into building products does come
with its challenges. Foster + Partners, the architectural firm led by
Norman Foster that refurbished the Hearst Tower in New York and designed
a London skyscraper known as the Gherkin, said it’s important to
consider that the structures are accessible for cleaning and
maintenance. The company is designing a new office for Bloomberg LP in
London and has filed plans with city authorities
detailing PV installations blended into the roof.
Masdar Building
In Abu Dhabi, Foster spread 3,156 solar panels across
the top of the Masdar Institute building, providing shade for an
interior colonnade for the energy research organization.
“While the individual cells are discreet and easy to
integrate, they require cabling and additional elements that need to be
carefully incorporated,” said David Nelson, head of design at Foster +
Partners.
Integrated solar products are still at least 10
percent more expensive than traditional solar photovoltaic panels, said
Alan South, chief innovation officer at Solar Century.
“At the moment, it’s much cheaper to install a
conventional module unless your roof is an unusual shape — and
expensive solar installed on unsuitable roofs is a decorative design
feature, not an energy solution,” said Jenny Chase, solar analyst at
Bloomberg New Energy Finance.
Still, generating electricity where it’s used becomes
more attractive as the price of energy from large, central fossil- fuel
power stations increases. The cost of solar energy is declining as
centrally produced power rises, said Accenture’s Russell. That will
weigh on utilities.
“Next-generation solar technologies could have a
potentially devastating impact on the utility industry’s revenues,” said
Russell. “This will force utilities to spread costs across fewer
customers, driving up energy prices, and making distributed generation
even more attractive.”
Copyright 2013 Bloomberg
http://www.renewableenergyworld.com/rea/news/article/2013/07/building-integrated-solar-pv-market-set-to-triple-by-2015
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