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Solar Recycling Industry Emerges to Address ‘Tsunami’ of Used Panels

August 16, 2023
Reading time: 5 minutes
Full Story: The Associated Press
Primary Author: Isabella O'malley

Green Energy Futures/Flickr

Green Energy Futures/Flickr

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Sunlight beats down on a graveyard for dead solar panels in Yuma, Arizona, hundreds stacked in neat piles, waiting for their next life. The great majority of worn and damaged panels are still dumped in landfills. But with more and more piling up, many people know that needs to change.

In this desert city where Arizona, California, Sonora, and Baja California meet, North America’s first utility-scale solar panel recycling plant has opened to address what founders of We Recycle Solar call a “tsunami” of solar waste, The Associated Press reports. Plans to address climate change rely on massively scaling up clean, solar electricity.

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The panels, stacked and banded, come here from the company’s main collection warehouse in Hackettstown, NJ, plus six other locations across the country.

Workers manoeuvre the stacks into the sprawling 75,000-square-foot facility on forklifts, then gently lift each out by hand to begin separating them by brand and model. Some only have a few cracks in their glass, sometimes from storm damage.

These can be reused, said We Recycle Solar CEO Adam Saghei, and there is a market for them—clients around the world who search for refurbished panels for their affordability. The Yuma facility, he told AP, is like “your local thrift store that looks to upcycle.”

Some have been sold, for example, at the store Mercados Solar in Carolina, Puerto Rico.

Those that don’t go toward testing and resale head down a conveyor belt where glass, metals, and other valuable materials are separated.

Solar panels are built to withstand decades of harsh weather, so it’s difficult to break the resilient bonding that keeps them together. Separating the glass without it shattering, for example, is a challenge. But with robotic suction arms assisted by workers, they come apart.

Some of the highest-value materials are copper, silver, aluminum, glass, and crystalline silicon. Repurposing these means finding new uses for them, such as selling glass to companies that do sandblasting.

For Saghei, the inspiration for the company came in 2017. He was working in the computer electronics waste sector, seeing solar spread across warehouse roofs and wondering where the panels would eventually go. He realized green technology doesn’t automatically stay green once it is decommissioned or retired.

“Solar energy is a great technology, but it can feed a whole industry like aluminum and glass,” he said. “Why are we spending tens of millions of dollars on these materials from overseas when we can produce them right here, right now?”

Copper is one metal the recycling yields, said Dwight Clark, the company’s director of compliance and recycling technology. “Granted, it’s not a lot of pounds per solar panel. But when we do 10,000 pounds of solar panels an hour, we end up with 100 pounds of copper an hour coming out of it.”

The aluminum in the panels, meanwhile, “could come back as more solar panel frames, or it could go into the flight deck of a new Boeing aircraft.”

By 2050, solar waste in the U.S. will total some 78 million tons globally, said Mool Gupta, a professor in the Department of Electrical and Computer Engineering at the University of Virginia. The reason recycling and recovery isn’t robust yet, Gupta said, is that companies struggle to justify the US$30 per panel cost when they would pay only $1 for landfilling.

To one day see 100% of retired solar panels recycled, “let’s not make it any more expensive than what it would cost to landfill the module,” said Garvin Heath, a senior researcher at the U.S. National Renewable Energy Laboratory. “Let’s not have it cost the consumer anything, and instead have it break even for the recycler.”

Other companies are starting to get into the business.

Solarcycle, a startup based in Odessa, Texas., raised $30 million earlier this year, led by Fifth Wall, an asset manager focused on building decarbonization. And Solarpanelrecycling.com is an affiliate of electronics recycler PowerHouse Recycling.

The European Union has rules that require recycling of electronic waste under its Waste Electrical and Electronic Waste Directive (WEEE).

Market researcher Visiongain estimates the global market hit US$138-million last year and is growing fast, boosted in part by incentives offered in the U.S. Inflation Reduction Act.

Jack Groppo, professor of mining engineering at the University of Kentucky, said people have to stop scrapping the modules as fast as possible. “Once the solar panels go into the landfill, they’re gone unless we go back and mine the landfill,” he said.

In 20 years, people will mine landfills to recover valuable materials in the junked panels, Groppo predicted, but “it makes an awful lot more sense for us to separate them now.”

We Recycle Solar’s Yuma facility can process 7,500 panels in a single day, or roughly 69 million pounds a year. As of early June, it estimates that process has avoided more than 650,000 tons of carbon dioxide. The company reuses about 60% of the panels that come in.

The next big plan is to open another recycling facility alongside a large solar manufacturer in the Georgia, North Carolina, and South Carolina corridor.

For now, solar recycling companies are still figuring out how to make money, AP says. We Recycle Solar earns the most revenue at this point by sending out employees to dismantle large solar arrays. Reselling refurbished solar panels is its second-biggest income stream, while recycling brings in the least. Decommissioning and resale are actually subsidizing some of the recycling costs, Saghei said.

But Gupta said these profitability challenges are temporary and will be overcome. Researchers are hard at work on solving them, he said.

“Too many lives are lost to pollution, and solar is one of the top solutions.”

This Associated Press story was first published by The Canadian Press on August 1, 2023.



in Cities & Communities, Ending Emissions, Sub-National Governments, Supply Chains & Consumption, United States

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