DOE宣布近1.7亿美元的资金,以推进可用的太阳能技术
(2011-11-03 13:53:38)
标签:
太阳能美国光伏杂谈 |
分类: 市场观察 |
WASHINGTON, DC -
"These investments will drive innovation in the solar energy
field - laying the groundwork to meet our SunShot goal of
dramatically reducing the cost of solar energy nationwide and
helping America to win the race to produce the most cost-effective,
high-quality photovoltaics in the world," said Secretary
Chu.
The four funding opportunities announced today build on the
Department's strong portfolio of research and development efforts
in solar energy.
- Foundational Program to Advance Cell Efficiency
(F-PACE):
In a collaborative funding effort with the National Science Foundation, $39 million is available for research and development in solar device physics and PV technology to improve PV cell performance and reduce the costs of modules for grid-scale commercial applications. - PV Balance of Systems: $60 million in funding
is available for research, development, and demonstration of
balance of system components.
Projects may include new building-integrated photovoltaic products, new mounting and wiring technologies, and new building code language that can foster the use of innovative, low-cost hardware designs while maintaining safety and reliability. - Solar Energy Grid Integration Systems (SEGIS)-Advanced
Concepts: $40 million in funding is available to develop
technologies that will help increase the integration of solar
energy onto the electrical grid and facilitate interactions between
solar energy systems and Smart Grid technologies. This could
include projects focused on improved energy storage technologies
and better system functionality.
SEGIS-Advanced Concepts will also support projects like high voltage systems that reduce the overall installed costs associated with balance of systems components costs for installations, and projects focused on technologies like micro-inverters that are capable of harvesting more energy from the sun. - PV Next Generation: $30 million in funding is available for early-stage applied research to demonstrate and prove new concepts in materials, processes, and device designs for solar PV component development at the laboratory scale.
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The SunShot Initiative builds on the legacy of President
Kennedy's 1960s "moon shot" goal, which laid out a plan to regain
the country's lead in the space race and land a man on the moon.
The program will aggressively drive innovations in the ways that
solar systems are conceived, designed, manufactured and installed,
to bring down the costs of solar energy systems so that they are
cost-competitive without subsidies with other forms of electricity
generation.
In the last ten years, DOE has invested more than $1 billion in
solar energy research that has been leveraged with significant
private industry funding to support more than $2 billion in total
solar R&D projects.