Description

Book Synopsis
The book describes the industrial revolution associated with the implementation of electric power generation by photovoltaics (PV). The book’s editor and contributing authors are among the leading pioneers in PV from its industrial birth in 1954 all the way up to the stormy developments during the first decade of the new century. The book describes the dramatic events in industry between 2009 and 2013 and puts all this into perspective. It concludes that solar power is yet to strengthen its role in technology and in mainstream of the world’s economy.

Trade Review

"This book brings together a collection of lively, easy-to-read articles written by notable global leaders involved in the research and development of photovoltaic (PV) systems. The book is the inspiration of its editor, Prof. Wolfgang Palz, himself a true solar pioneer. In the opening chapters, Prof. Walz provides the historical context and a future vision of the world of solar power. This is followed by a compilation of contributions from numerous experts who provide entertaining and thought-provoking perspectives on PV’s history and development, including the early days of research and the gradual and, more recent, explosive growth of the technology as a global clean energy source. There are abundant stories and anecdotes about the many unique applications of PV technologies, the many scientists working to develop and market these technologies, and the key milestones in the history of this technology. This book is must reading for all who are working in the photovoltaic field and for all who are curious about the major role this technology is coming to play in our renewable energy future."

Dave Renne, President, International Solar Energy Society

"Solar Power for the World is quite a remarkable book as it details from many of the original pioneers the development of solar, and in particular PV, from its early beginnings to the current time. Initially photovoltaics was thought to be, by those outside of academic circles, just an interesting phenomenon of low efficiency and expensive and suitable only for use by space vehicles. However, the early visionaries laid the foundations for the multi-billion dollar industry it is now and helped develop solar to become a mainstream power source. Without the policy contributions from people like Hermann Scheer and the extension of the technologies to take in transport and storage the vision of towards 100 percent renewables for future power could not even be envisaged. This book is a great reference on the transition of thought from research to widespread public use of solar and all the different insights necessary to make the shift to low carbon energy. It is a very useful reference."

Monica Oliphant, Research Scientist, Specialising in Renewable Energy and Residential End Use Efficiency


"This book brings together a collection of lively, easy-to-read articles written by notable global leaders involved in the research and development of photovoltaic (PV) systems. The book is the inspiration of its editor, Prof. Wolfgang Palz, himself a true solar pioneer. In the opening chapters, Prof. Walz provides the historical context and a future vision of the world of solar power. This is followed by a compilation of contributions from numerous experts who provide entertaining and thought-provoking perspectives on PV’s history and development, including the early days of research and the gradual and, more recent, explosive growth of the technology as a global clean energy source. There are abundant stories and anecdotes about the many unique applications of PV technologies, the many scientists working to develop and market these technologies, and the key milestones in the history of this technology. This book is must reading for all who are working in the photovoltaic field and for all who are curious about the major role this technology is coming to play in our renewable energy future."

Dave Renne, President, International Solar Energy Society

"Solar Power for the World is quite a remarkable book as it details from many of the original pioneers the development of solar, and in particular PV, from its early beginnings to the current time. Initially photovoltaics was thought to be, by those outside of academic circles, just an interesting phenomenon of low efficiency and expensive and suitable only for use by space vehicles. However, the early visionaries laid the foundations for the multi-billion dollar industry it is now and helped develop solar to become a mainstream power source. Without the policy contributions from people like Hermann Scheer and the extension of the technologies to take in transport and storage the vision of towards 100 percent renewables for future power could not even be envisaged. This book is a great reference on the transition of thought from research to widespread public use of solar and all the different insights necessary to make the shift to low carbon energy. It is a very useful reference."

Monica Oliphant, Research Scientist, Specialising in Renewable Energy and Residential End Use Efficiency



Table of Contents

List of Contributors
Hymn to the Sun
Introduction to Solar Power for theWorld
PARTI ALIFE FOR PV: WOLFGANG PALZ’S NOTABLE ROLE IN DEVELOPMENT
FROM THE EARLY DAYS UNTIL NOW
1 The Rising Sun in a Developing World
Wolfgang Palz
1.1 Electric Power, a Pillar of Modern Society
1.1.1 Electricity in Today’s Life
1.1.2 The ConventionalWorld of Electricity
1.1.3 Solar PV: A Part of the New Semiconductor
World
1.2 Looking Back to Light the Future
1.2.1 The Emergence of Electricity
1.2.2 From the "Voltaic Pile" to the Photovoltaic Cell
1.2.3 Photovoltaic Power: The First Steps
1.3 Solar Power for Space Satellites
1.4 First Ideas about Lighting with Solar Power
1.4.1 Mutations of the Societies in the US and Europe
1.4.2 A New Awareness for Solar Power
1.4.3 The Oil-Price Shocks and the Nuclear Disaster
of 1986
1.5 After the Vision: A Mountain of Challenges
1.5.1 PV in the Starting Blocks in 1973
1.5.2 The Cost Problem: Technological Challenges
1.5.3 The Chicken and Egg Problem: Mass
Production
1.5.4 Entrenched Energy Strategies and Politics
1.5.5 Against Dominant Allocations of State Budgets
1.5.6 Administrations
1.5.7 Energy Pay-Back Time and Module Lifetime
1.5.8 Intermittency of Supply
1.5.9 Environmental Challenges
1.6 Leadership
1.6.1 The Pioneering Role of the US
1.6.2 France: A European Solar Pioneer
1.6.3 PV Start-Up in Germany
1.6.4 PV Ups and Downs in Japan
1.6.5 UNESCO
1.6.6 The European Union
1.6.7 The G8
1.6.8 The Energy Empire Fights Back
2 Solar Power for the World
Wolfgang Palz
2.1 Basics for a New Solar Age
2.1.1 The Ethical Imperative of Photovoltaics
2.1.2 Cost and Social Acceptance: Ingredients for a
Viable Energy Strategy
2.1.3 PV as Part of a Holistic Approach towards
Renewable Energy Implementation and Energy
Conservation
2.1.4 What about the Power Plants on the Road?
2.1.4.1 Car drivers and their power plants
2.1.4.2 Mobilising PV for transport
2.2 Driving Forces
2.2.1 Aspirations of the People
2.2.2 Preserving Nature and Alleviating Climate
Change
2.2.3 Peak Oil
2.2.4 Energy Security of Supply
2.3 The Role of Stakeholders in Society
2.3.1 Governments and Administrations
2.3.2 Industry and Finance
2.3.3 PV Costs and Benefits for Society: A Special
Role for the Grid Operators
2.4 A New Energy Paradigm
2.4.1 Centralised or Decentralised PV
2.4.2 What Role Can Conventional Power Utilities
Play?
2.4.3 Communities and Regions Mastering Their
Own Energy Supply
2.4.4 The Autonomous Energy House: Solar
Architecture and the Building Industry
2.5 Power for the People
2.5.1 Starting a Global Strategy: 10Watts per Head
2.5.2 PV for the People in the IndustrialisedWorld
2.5.3 PV for the People in the Solar Belt
2.6 Power for the Poor
2.6.1 Getting Involved
2.6.2 PV Power for the Poor in the Developing
Countries
2.6.3 Power for the Poor in the Industrialised
Countries
2.7 Power for Peace
3 PV Today and Forever
Wolfgang Palz
3.1 Solar Power 2009–10: AWealth of Achievements
3.1.1 The Global PV Markets 2009–10
3.1.2 Political, Financial, and Industrial Environment
3.1.3 The Technology Boom Goes On
3.2 Outlook
3.2.1 On the Threshold of Commercial Viability
3.2.2 Outlook towards 2020
3.2.3 PV as Part of a 100 Percent Renewable Energy
World
3.3 Conclusions
PART II THE BEGINNING OF PV IN THE UNITED STATES
4 EarlyWork on Photovoltaic Devices at the Bell Telephone
Laboratories
Morton B. Prince
5 Terrestrial Photovoltaic Industry: The Beginning
Peter F. Varadi
6 Bringing the Oil Industry into the Picture
Karl Wolfgang B¨oer
7 The Story of SunPower
Richard M. Swanson
7.1 Introduction
7.2 The Beginnings of Terrestrial PV
7.3 My Early Years
7.4 Formation of SunPower
7.5 Concentrators
7.6 Race Cars
7.7 Optical Detectors
7.8 The PV Business Takes Off
7.9 Airplanes
7.10 Project Mercury
7.11 A New Plan
7.12 Cypress
7.13 Goodbye Concentrators
7.14 Becoming a Manufacturer
7.15 Polarization
7.16 IPO
7.17 PowerLight
7.18 Epilog
8 History of Technologies, Development for Solar Silicon Cost
Reduction
Frederick Schmid
8.1 Introduction
8.2 Development of HEM and FAST for Reducing the
Cost of SiliconWafers
8.3 FAST Development
8.4 Development of Technology for Reducing Silicon
Meltstock
8.5 Summary
9 Solar Cell Development Work at COMSAT Laboratories
(1967–1975)
Denis J. Curtin
10 The IEEE Photovoltaic Specialists Conference
Americo F. (Moe) Forestieri
10.1 Brief History of the US IEEE PVSC and the William
R. Cherry Committee
10.2 8th PVSC: The 1970 PVSC in Seattle,Washington,
by Joseph Loferski
10.3 12th PVSC: 1976 Baton Rouge, Louisiana,
by Americo Forestieri
PART III PV STARTING A SOLAR AGE IN EUROPE
11 Initiating a Solar Revolution in Germany
Hermann Scheer
12 My Solar Age Started with Tchernobyl
Franz Alt
12.1 Solar Policy Is Social Policy
13 Will This Work? Is It Realistic? Thoughts and Acts of a
Political Practitioner with a Solar Vision
Hans-Josef Fell
13.1 MyWay of Solar Thinking
13.2 Being Called a Solar Do-Gooder and Unrealistic
Politician
13.3 Some Important Steps of My Life Illustrate the
Persistence of My SolarWay
13.4 And How Is It Today?
14 The Role of Research Institutes for the Promotion of PV:
The Case of Fraunhofer ISE (Institute of Solar Energy
Systems)
Adolf Goetzberger
15 PV in Berlin—How it All Began: The Story of Solon, Q-Cells.
PV in Brazil
Stefan Krauter
16 The Kick-Off PV Programme in Germany: The One
Thousand PV Roofs Programme
Walter Sandtner
17 The Story of Developing Solar Glass Fac¸ades
Joachim Benemann
18 PV in Europe, from 1974 to 2009: A Personal Experience
Helmut Kiess
18.1 Insight Period: 1974–1988
18.2 Innovation Period during the Decade 1988–1998
18.2.1 State of the Art in 1988: Some Details
18.2.2 The Decade between 1988 and 1998
18.2.3 State of the Art in 1998: Some Details
18.3 Innovation and Industrial Production during the
Decade between 1998 and 2008
18.3.1 State of the Art in 2008: Some Details
18.4 Epilogue
19 France Did NotWant to Look for the Sun
Alain Li´ebard and Yves-Bruno Civel
20 More Electricity for Less CO2
Yves Bamberger
20.1 Electric Eco-Efficient End-Uses
20.2 Achieving an Ever Lower-Carbon Electricity Mix
with Nuclear and Renewables
20.3 Networks: A Tool for Pooling Production and
Integrating Renewable Energies
20.4 Carbon-Free Electric Mix as an Opportunity to
Develop New Industrial Facilities
21 The History of Renewable Energies in the Canary Islands,
Especially in Tenerife
Ricardo Melchior and Manuel Cendagorta
22 WhyWas Switzerland Front-Runner for PV in the 90s but
Lost the Leadership after 2000?
Thomas Nordmann
23 Solar Power in Geneva, Switzerland
Philippe Verburgh
23.1 A First-Class Solar Potential
23.2 The "5 MW Solar" Project and the "SIG Vitale
Range"
23.3 A Sunny Future for Geneva
24 The PV World Conference in Vienna
Wolfgang Hein
25 Abandoning Nuclear in Favor of Renewable Energies: The
Life Story of Giuliano Grassi—Florence, Italy
Giuliano Grassi
25.1 First Period: Beginning of My Professional Activity
as Engineer
25.2 Second Period: Transition from Electro-Mechanical
to Nuclear Activity
25.3 Third Period: Renewable Energies
25.4 Concluding Remarks
PART IV PV IN ASIA: A DRAGON ISWAKING UP
26 PV in Japan: Yesterday, Today and Tomorrow 417
Osamui Ikki and Izumi Kaizuka
26.1 History
26.2 Current Status of PV in Japan
26.3 New Support Framework for PV
26.4 Conclusion
27 Leaders of the Early Days of the Chinese Solar Industry
Qin Haiyan
27.1 Turning a Dream into a Reality: The Story of
Huang Ming
27.2 The Richest Man in China: The Story of Shi
Zhengrong
27.3 Internationalization and a Traditional Chinese Soul:
The Story of Miao Liansheng
27.4 Development Led by Technology: The Story of
Gao Jifan
28 Review of China’s Solar PV Industry in 2009
Gao Hu
29 Lighting theWorld: Yesterday, Today and Tomorrow
Biswajit Ghosh
29.1 Light and Energy
29.2 Path toward Initiatives on PV Research
29.3 PV in India and International Scientific
Cooperation
29.4 Lighting the Remote
29.5 Views of the Author
PARTV PVFOR A BETTER DEVELOPING WORLD
30 Photovoltaics in the World Bank Group Portfolio
Anil Cabraal
30.1 World Bank Group Photovoltaics Projects
30.2 Business Models for Off-Grid Service
30.3 Key Lessons of Experience
30.4 Guidelines for Designing Sustainable Off-Grid
Projects
30.5 Future Support for Photovoltaics
31 Illiterate Rural Grandmothers Solar-Electrifying Their Own
Villages
Bunker Roy
31.1 Ground-Breaking Innovation in the Field of
Technology
31.2 Sustainable Development: Now and in the Future
31.3 Innovation and Its Practical Application
31.4 Demystifying of 21st Century Technology in
19th Century Conditions—Management, Control
and Ownership in the Hands of the Rural Poor
around theWorld
31.5 Present and Future Impact of Innovation: Number
of People Affected
31.5.1 Renewable Energy
31.5.2 Continent of Africa
31.5.3 Global
31.5.3.1 Providing an answer to a major
challenge-tackling global climate
change from the community level
32 Early PV Markets and Solar Solutions in South Asia
Neville Williams
33 Photovoltaic Power Systems for Lifting Women Out of
Poverty in Sub-Saharan Africa
Dominique Campana
33.1 Solar Energy against the "Energy Poverty" Trap
33.2 In Conclusion
34 Promoting PV in Developing Countries
Bernard McNelis
34.1 Looking at Solar
34.2 Into PV
34.3 Into All Things Solar
34.4 Into Intermediate Technology
34.5 Into Africa
34.6 Global Solar Pumping Programme
34.7 IT Power
34.8 Mali
34.9 Dominican Republic
34.10 China
34.11 Robert Hill
34.12 EPIA
34.13 World Bank,Washington, Corruption
34.14 Other Countries, People, Institutions
34.15 Where DoWe Go from Here?
PART VI PV FOR THEWORLD
35 On the International Call for Photovoltaics of 2008
Daniel Lincot
36 AWorld Network for Solar R&D: ISES
Monica Oliphant
37 Three Steps to a Solar System: From 1% to 40% and 100%
Harry Lehmann
37.1 Equal Treatment
37.2 A Further Step: Coming Out of the Niche
37.3 Full Solar Supply or the "Great Transformation"
37.4 Scenarios: A Look into the Present and the
Future
37.5 To Sum Up I Can Say: 100% Solar System Is
Possible!
38 SolarBank
Michael T. Eckhart
38.1 Landmark Solar PV Study in 1978
38.2 Away from PV for 15 Years
38.3 Return to Solar PV in 1995
38.4 World Bank 1996–1998
38.5 India 1996–2001
38.6 South Africa 1997–2002
38.7 Europe 1997–2004
38.8 ACORE 2001–Present
38.9 Bonn 2004, WIREC 2008, and IRENA
38.10 SolarBank Looking Forward
39 Solar Power in Practice
Stefan Behling
40 AWorld in Blue
Bernd Melchior
40.1 From Butterflies to aWorld in "Blue": How Did This
Happen?
40.2 New Treatment for Porous Materials to Conserve
Monuments Like the Dome of Cologne
40.3 Process Steps for a Treatment with the
Autoclave
40.4 Translucent Insulation Material
40.5 My Start into Photovoltaic
40.6 Changing DC Current into AC Current
40.7 Diffuse Light Concentrator
40.8 Tracking and Concentration Systems
40.9 The ADS Concept: Autonomous, Decentralized,
Sustainable
40.10 The Blue Mountain
40.11 ADS Robinson Club on Fuerteventura
40.12 First Bungalow in theWorld Realized in ADS:
"Casa Solar", Almunecar, Spain
40.13 Solar Powered Container: 3000 km Trip to 7th EU
Photovoltaic Solar Conference and Exhibition in
Seville, Spain, October 1986
40.14 A Solar Powered OrthopedicWorkshop Container
for a Hospital in Tanzania
40.15 Integration of Photovoltaic into Roofs: "Sunflate"
40.16 SUNCLAY + SUNERGY: A Two-Component
Photovoltaic System for the Harmonic, Aesthetic
and Flexible Integration into the Architecture of
Roof
40.17 Next Generation Photovoltaic
40.18 New Generation of Solar Clay Tiles
40.19 The Combination of Solar and Wind BSWT
41 Factory for Sale, or the Long and StonyWay to Cheap Solar
Energy: The Story of the Thin-Film CdTe Solar Cells; First
Solar and Others—A Semi-Autobiography
Dieter Bonnet
42 High Efficiency Photovoltaics for a SustainableWorld
Antonio Luque
42.1 Introduction
42.2 The 2008 Spanish Boom
42.3 A Market Forecast Model
42.4 The FULLSPECTRUM Project and the ISFOC
42.5 Summary
43 Nonconventional Sensitized Mesoscopic (Gr¨atzel) Solar
Cells
Michael Gr¨atzel
44 Solar Bicycles, Mercedes, Handcuffs—PlusEnergy Buildings
Gallus Cadonau
44.1 AWorldwide Unique Solar Decision: Tour de Sol
44.1.1 CO2-free Hotel Ucliva in the Swiss Alps:
1st Solarcar Race of theWorld
44.1.2 Tour de Sol 1985: Solar Bicycles and
Mercedes Benz
44.1.3 First Solarcar Driving Past an Atomic
Power Plant
44.1.4 Geneva—Final Stage of the 1st Tour de Sol
1985: The Power of the Sun
44.1.5 Tour de Sol 2 in 1986: Massachusetts
Institute of Technology in the Roadside
Ditch
44.1.6 Welding and Sweating Instead of
Champagne
44.1.7 Strong Solar Teams from Germany and the
Swiss School of Engineering Biel
44.1.8 Solar Cells for "Independency" or
Terrestrial PV Utilisation?
44.1.9 Tour 3 in 1987: Huge Interest and
"Chermobiles"
44.1.10 Huge International Media Coverage
44.1.11 Tour Organisation and Its Regulations
44.1.12 Tour de Sol Protests and Appeals in Court?
44.1.13 Solar Mountain Race: Through 360 Curves
to Arosa/GR
44.2 World’s First Energy Feed-in System in
Burgdorf/BE
44.2.1 Tour de Sol in France: Solar Energy Instead
of Air Pollution
44.2.2 World’s First Energy Feed-in System in
Burgdorf/BE: "Grid Interconnection"
44.2.3 The Principles of Solar Energy Use: Best
Technology or Self-Sufficiency?
44.2.4 Tour de Sol 4 in 1988: PV Innovation and
Financing Are Getting Broader
44.2.5 PV on Land and onWater
44.2.6 Solar Energy Is Getting Increasingly
Popular Also for Groups and Managers
44.2.7 Safety, Recuperation and Road Capability in
Winter
44.2.8 Solar Power: A Friendly Alternative
44.2.9 Tour de Sol: "A Hotbed for Solar-Electric
Mobility"
44.2.10 Car Makers, What Have You Done in the
Past?
44.2.11 Tour de Sol and the International Solarcar
Federation (ISF)
44.2.12 Rail 2000 and Solarcars in Double-Deck
Coaches
44.2.13 The Ideal SOLARCAR 2000: Emission-Free
Traffic Circulation in the 21st Century
44.3 The Solar Alternative in Road Traffic:World Solar
Challenge
44.3.1 The Solar Alternative in Road Traffic
44.3.1.1 Two hundred years after the
French Revolution: The Solar
Revolution (1989)
44.3.1.2 California’s Clean Air Act,
Zero-Emission Vehicles, PV
Program for 1000 kW Roofs
44.3.1.3 First alpine crossing with
solarcars: The Sun conquers the
Gotthard Pass in 1989
44.3.1.4 Solarcar: A danger for 150 pigs?
44.3.1.5 Alpine tests at the 1st European
Championship of Alpine
Solarcars (ASEM) in 1989
44.3.1.6 Bea Vetterli’s solarcar in the
mountains: downhill with more
than 100 km/h
44.3.1.7 St. Moritz: 1st ASEM finish and
1st electric light in Switzerland
44.3.1.8 The British and St. Moritz:
Inventors of winter tourism
44.3.1.9 Clean Energy St. Moritz: The
overall energy concept
44.3.1.10 Last Tour de Sol in 1991
44.3.1.11 Solarcar world record: 148 km/h
at the ASEM 1995
44.3.2 World Solar Challenge in Australia and
the US
44.3.2.1 FirstWorld Solar Challenge in
1987: 3005 km across Australia
44.3.2.2 Japan’sWaterloo at the 1st WSC:
Detlef Schmitz Missed the Start
44.3.2.3 The SecondWorld Solar
Challenge and its dangers in the
Australian desert
44.3.2.4 The "GREATEST RACE on EARTH,
Creating a SOLUTION not
POLLUTION"
44.3.2.5 International Solar High-Tech
Competition across Australia
44.3.2.6 What technology and strategy
was responsible for the victory?
44.3.2.7 "Spirit of Biel": 1.8 dl (Solar) fuel
for 100 km—55 times more
efficient
44.3.2.8 Great suspense and an odd cup in
McLarens on the lake
44.3.2.9 Detlef Schmitz: the friendly
"Suitcase Man"
44.3.2.10 Detlef: veteran and
misadventurer at each WSC
1987, 1990, 1993, 1996, 1999
44.3.2.11 World Solar Challenge 1993:
Japan invests millions in
solarcars
44.3.2.12 Honda changes its strategy for
the WSC 1993
44.3.2.13 WSC and Sunrayce in the US and
other solar races in 1996
44.4 Solar Prize, Handcuffs and PlusEnergy Buildings
44.4.1 Swiss Solar Prize and Handcuffs
44.4.1.1 Solar utilisation: from traffic to
building sector
44.4.1.2 "Solar 91: for an energyindependent
Switzerland"
44.4.1.3 First Solar Prize 1991 for world’s
biggest solar surface per
inhabitant
44.4.1.4 Federal Councillor Adolf Ogi:
initiative, courage and solar
installations
44.4.1.5 Handcuffs, excavators and solar
electricity
44.4.1.6 Ren´e B¨ artschi: "most successful
Swiss governing councillor"
44.4.1.7 Four times too much solar energy
and a winter bathe
44.4.1.8 European Commission, US
Department of Energy and
Japanese Industry
44.4.1.9 Best integrated solar
installations: without
overbuilding cultural land
44.4.1.10 The solar mission of the Federal
Minister of Energy
44.4.2 Solar Energy on the Rise
44.4.2.1 European PV Conference in
and popular initiative for solar
energy
44.4.2.2 European Parliament: Swiss
Solar Prize—model for European
Solar Prize
44.4.2.3 Bonn-Cologne-Brussels-
Amsterdam: more solar
electricity than in Australia
44.4.2.4 Federal Chancellor Vranitzky
awards 1st European Solar Prize
in Vienna
44.4.2.5 Chancellor Vranitzky: "Central
Europe free of nuclear power
plants"
44.4.2.6 First European Solar Prize goes
to successful opponent of EDF
44.4.2.7 City/Charter: implementation of
the goals of Rio on municipality
level
44.4.2.8 Breakthrough in Parliament in
1997: one CHF billion for solar
energy
44.4.2.9 Ucliva Agreement: first European
Shell Solar factory in Switzerland
44.4.3 Mephisto & Co against Solar Energy
44.4.3.1 The wisdom of Arthur
Schopenhauer and solar energy
44.4.3.2 J.W. Goethe and "a very good
dinner"—instead of solar energy
44.4.3.3 Combat against renewable
energies
44.4.3.4 Millions for deception of citizens
44.4.3.5 Economic war against innovative
businesses
44.4.3.6 Swiss economical functionaries:
best work for the Chinese
Communist Party
44.4.3.7 Do authorities harass citizens
that are loyal to the constitution?
44.4.3.8 Solar energy instead of
unconstitutional bureaucracy
44.4.3.9 Constitutional right for solar
building permit: new law within
three months
44.4.4 Market-Based Compensation for
Renewable Energies
44.4.4.1 Market-based compensation for
billions of fossil-nuclear
subsidies
44.4.4.2 Prof. Dr. Ren´e Rhinow: best usage
of revenues for measures
44.4.4.3 European Court of Justice 2001:
grid feed-in is not tax
44.4.4.4 Democratic decision of the
electricity consumer on energy
investments
44.4.5 Best Innovative Entrepreneurs for
Sustainable Economy
44.4.5.1 Small- and medium-sized
entrepreneurs are the most
innovative
44.4.5.2 Biogas—compo-gas: 1 kg of
banana peel = 1 km of car drive
44.4.5.3 Solar house on the Federation
Square: built in 22 hours
44.4.5.4 Swiss Solar Prize for first
PlusEnergy Building
44.4.5.5 Shell’s solar factory in
Gelsenkirchen: "we want to earn
money"
44.4.5.6 Lord Norman Foster on the 15th
Swiss Solar Prize 2005
44.4.5.7 PlusEnergy Buildings for Alpine
resort: 175% Self-Supply
44.4.5.8 Energy-intensive industrial
PlusEnergy Building: 125%
self-supply
44.4.5.9 Installed PV performance: world
leader in 1992—last in 2008
44.4.5.10 Sustainable economy: amateur
becomes world champion
44.4.5.11 China could outrun all—
economically and ecologically
44.5 PEB Cover 75% ofWorld’s Energy Demand
44.5.1 From Solar Collectors to PlusEnergy
Buildings
44.5.1.1 Conclusion of Tour de Sol, WSC as
well as Swiss and European Solar
Prize
44.5.1.2 Energy efficiency: "Sine qua non"
of PlusEnergy Buildings
44.5.1.3 PlusEnergy Buildings (PEB) with
a self-supply between 100% and
200%
44.5.1.4 PV and refurbishment of a
6-family house: energy needs
reduced by 90%
44.5.1.5 PV on PlusEnergy Buildings: the
level of building technology of
2010
44.5.1.6 PV and refurbishment of a
12-family house: energy needs
reduced by 93%
44.5.1.7 Energy-intensive business
buildings as PlusEnergy
Buildings
44.5.2 PV-PEB Cover 75% ofWorld’s Energy
Consumption
44.5.3 Stanford: "Clearly, Enough Renewable
Energy Exists"
44.5.4 First European Award for PlusEnergy
Buildings of CHF(≈$) 100000
Index

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      Publication Date: 21/10/2013
      ISBN13: 9789814411875, 978-9814411875
      ISBN10: 9814411876

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      Book Synopsis
      The book describes the industrial revolution associated with the implementation of electric power generation by photovoltaics (PV). The book’s editor and contributing authors are among the leading pioneers in PV from its industrial birth in 1954 all the way up to the stormy developments during the first decade of the new century. The book describes the dramatic events in industry between 2009 and 2013 and puts all this into perspective. It concludes that solar power is yet to strengthen its role in technology and in mainstream of the world’s economy.

      Trade Review

      "This book brings together a collection of lively, easy-to-read articles written by notable global leaders involved in the research and development of photovoltaic (PV) systems. The book is the inspiration of its editor, Prof. Wolfgang Palz, himself a true solar pioneer. In the opening chapters, Prof. Walz provides the historical context and a future vision of the world of solar power. This is followed by a compilation of contributions from numerous experts who provide entertaining and thought-provoking perspectives on PV’s history and development, including the early days of research and the gradual and, more recent, explosive growth of the technology as a global clean energy source. There are abundant stories and anecdotes about the many unique applications of PV technologies, the many scientists working to develop and market these technologies, and the key milestones in the history of this technology. This book is must reading for all who are working in the photovoltaic field and for all who are curious about the major role this technology is coming to play in our renewable energy future."

      Dave Renne, President, International Solar Energy Society

      "Solar Power for the World is quite a remarkable book as it details from many of the original pioneers the development of solar, and in particular PV, from its early beginnings to the current time. Initially photovoltaics was thought to be, by those outside of academic circles, just an interesting phenomenon of low efficiency and expensive and suitable only for use by space vehicles. However, the early visionaries laid the foundations for the multi-billion dollar industry it is now and helped develop solar to become a mainstream power source. Without the policy contributions from people like Hermann Scheer and the extension of the technologies to take in transport and storage the vision of towards 100 percent renewables for future power could not even be envisaged. This book is a great reference on the transition of thought from research to widespread public use of solar and all the different insights necessary to make the shift to low carbon energy. It is a very useful reference."

      Monica Oliphant, Research Scientist, Specialising in Renewable Energy and Residential End Use Efficiency


      "This book brings together a collection of lively, easy-to-read articles written by notable global leaders involved in the research and development of photovoltaic (PV) systems. The book is the inspiration of its editor, Prof. Wolfgang Palz, himself a true solar pioneer. In the opening chapters, Prof. Walz provides the historical context and a future vision of the world of solar power. This is followed by a compilation of contributions from numerous experts who provide entertaining and thought-provoking perspectives on PV’s history and development, including the early days of research and the gradual and, more recent, explosive growth of the technology as a global clean energy source. There are abundant stories and anecdotes about the many unique applications of PV technologies, the many scientists working to develop and market these technologies, and the key milestones in the history of this technology. This book is must reading for all who are working in the photovoltaic field and for all who are curious about the major role this technology is coming to play in our renewable energy future."

      Dave Renne, President, International Solar Energy Society

      "Solar Power for the World is quite a remarkable book as it details from many of the original pioneers the development of solar, and in particular PV, from its early beginnings to the current time. Initially photovoltaics was thought to be, by those outside of academic circles, just an interesting phenomenon of low efficiency and expensive and suitable only for use by space vehicles. However, the early visionaries laid the foundations for the multi-billion dollar industry it is now and helped develop solar to become a mainstream power source. Without the policy contributions from people like Hermann Scheer and the extension of the technologies to take in transport and storage the vision of towards 100 percent renewables for future power could not even be envisaged. This book is a great reference on the transition of thought from research to widespread public use of solar and all the different insights necessary to make the shift to low carbon energy. It is a very useful reference."

      Monica Oliphant, Research Scientist, Specialising in Renewable Energy and Residential End Use Efficiency



      Table of Contents

      List of Contributors
      Hymn to the Sun
      Introduction to Solar Power for theWorld
      PARTI ALIFE FOR PV: WOLFGANG PALZ’S NOTABLE ROLE IN DEVELOPMENT
      FROM THE EARLY DAYS UNTIL NOW
      1 The Rising Sun in a Developing World
      Wolfgang Palz
      1.1 Electric Power, a Pillar of Modern Society
      1.1.1 Electricity in Today’s Life
      1.1.2 The ConventionalWorld of Electricity
      1.1.3 Solar PV: A Part of the New Semiconductor
      World
      1.2 Looking Back to Light the Future
      1.2.1 The Emergence of Electricity
      1.2.2 From the "Voltaic Pile" to the Photovoltaic Cell
      1.2.3 Photovoltaic Power: The First Steps
      1.3 Solar Power for Space Satellites
      1.4 First Ideas about Lighting with Solar Power
      1.4.1 Mutations of the Societies in the US and Europe
      1.4.2 A New Awareness for Solar Power
      1.4.3 The Oil-Price Shocks and the Nuclear Disaster
      of 1986
      1.5 After the Vision: A Mountain of Challenges
      1.5.1 PV in the Starting Blocks in 1973
      1.5.2 The Cost Problem: Technological Challenges
      1.5.3 The Chicken and Egg Problem: Mass
      Production
      1.5.4 Entrenched Energy Strategies and Politics
      1.5.5 Against Dominant Allocations of State Budgets
      1.5.6 Administrations
      1.5.7 Energy Pay-Back Time and Module Lifetime
      1.5.8 Intermittency of Supply
      1.5.9 Environmental Challenges
      1.6 Leadership
      1.6.1 The Pioneering Role of the US
      1.6.2 France: A European Solar Pioneer
      1.6.3 PV Start-Up in Germany
      1.6.4 PV Ups and Downs in Japan
      1.6.5 UNESCO
      1.6.6 The European Union
      1.6.7 The G8
      1.6.8 The Energy Empire Fights Back
      2 Solar Power for the World
      Wolfgang Palz
      2.1 Basics for a New Solar Age
      2.1.1 The Ethical Imperative of Photovoltaics
      2.1.2 Cost and Social Acceptance: Ingredients for a
      Viable Energy Strategy
      2.1.3 PV as Part of a Holistic Approach towards
      Renewable Energy Implementation and Energy
      Conservation
      2.1.4 What about the Power Plants on the Road?
      2.1.4.1 Car drivers and their power plants
      2.1.4.2 Mobilising PV for transport
      2.2 Driving Forces
      2.2.1 Aspirations of the People
      2.2.2 Preserving Nature and Alleviating Climate
      Change
      2.2.3 Peak Oil
      2.2.4 Energy Security of Supply
      2.3 The Role of Stakeholders in Society
      2.3.1 Governments and Administrations
      2.3.2 Industry and Finance
      2.3.3 PV Costs and Benefits for Society: A Special
      Role for the Grid Operators
      2.4 A New Energy Paradigm
      2.4.1 Centralised or Decentralised PV
      2.4.2 What Role Can Conventional Power Utilities
      Play?
      2.4.3 Communities and Regions Mastering Their
      Own Energy Supply
      2.4.4 The Autonomous Energy House: Solar
      Architecture and the Building Industry
      2.5 Power for the People
      2.5.1 Starting a Global Strategy: 10Watts per Head
      2.5.2 PV for the People in the IndustrialisedWorld
      2.5.3 PV for the People in the Solar Belt
      2.6 Power for the Poor
      2.6.1 Getting Involved
      2.6.2 PV Power for the Poor in the Developing
      Countries
      2.6.3 Power for the Poor in the Industrialised
      Countries
      2.7 Power for Peace
      3 PV Today and Forever
      Wolfgang Palz
      3.1 Solar Power 2009–10: AWealth of Achievements
      3.1.1 The Global PV Markets 2009–10
      3.1.2 Political, Financial, and Industrial Environment
      3.1.3 The Technology Boom Goes On
      3.2 Outlook
      3.2.1 On the Threshold of Commercial Viability
      3.2.2 Outlook towards 2020
      3.2.3 PV as Part of a 100 Percent Renewable Energy
      World
      3.3 Conclusions
      PART II THE BEGINNING OF PV IN THE UNITED STATES
      4 EarlyWork on Photovoltaic Devices at the Bell Telephone
      Laboratories
      Morton B. Prince
      5 Terrestrial Photovoltaic Industry: The Beginning
      Peter F. Varadi
      6 Bringing the Oil Industry into the Picture
      Karl Wolfgang B¨oer
      7 The Story of SunPower
      Richard M. Swanson
      7.1 Introduction
      7.2 The Beginnings of Terrestrial PV
      7.3 My Early Years
      7.4 Formation of SunPower
      7.5 Concentrators
      7.6 Race Cars
      7.7 Optical Detectors
      7.8 The PV Business Takes Off
      7.9 Airplanes
      7.10 Project Mercury
      7.11 A New Plan
      7.12 Cypress
      7.13 Goodbye Concentrators
      7.14 Becoming a Manufacturer
      7.15 Polarization
      7.16 IPO
      7.17 PowerLight
      7.18 Epilog
      8 History of Technologies, Development for Solar Silicon Cost
      Reduction
      Frederick Schmid
      8.1 Introduction
      8.2 Development of HEM and FAST for Reducing the
      Cost of SiliconWafers
      8.3 FAST Development
      8.4 Development of Technology for Reducing Silicon
      Meltstock
      8.5 Summary
      9 Solar Cell Development Work at COMSAT Laboratories
      (1967–1975)
      Denis J. Curtin
      10 The IEEE Photovoltaic Specialists Conference
      Americo F. (Moe) Forestieri
      10.1 Brief History of the US IEEE PVSC and the William
      R. Cherry Committee
      10.2 8th PVSC: The 1970 PVSC in Seattle,Washington,
      by Joseph Loferski
      10.3 12th PVSC: 1976 Baton Rouge, Louisiana,
      by Americo Forestieri
      PART III PV STARTING A SOLAR AGE IN EUROPE
      11 Initiating a Solar Revolution in Germany
      Hermann Scheer
      12 My Solar Age Started with Tchernobyl
      Franz Alt
      12.1 Solar Policy Is Social Policy
      13 Will This Work? Is It Realistic? Thoughts and Acts of a
      Political Practitioner with a Solar Vision
      Hans-Josef Fell
      13.1 MyWay of Solar Thinking
      13.2 Being Called a Solar Do-Gooder and Unrealistic
      Politician
      13.3 Some Important Steps of My Life Illustrate the
      Persistence of My SolarWay
      13.4 And How Is It Today?
      14 The Role of Research Institutes for the Promotion of PV:
      The Case of Fraunhofer ISE (Institute of Solar Energy
      Systems)
      Adolf Goetzberger
      15 PV in Berlin—How it All Began: The Story of Solon, Q-Cells.
      PV in Brazil
      Stefan Krauter
      16 The Kick-Off PV Programme in Germany: The One
      Thousand PV Roofs Programme
      Walter Sandtner
      17 The Story of Developing Solar Glass Fac¸ades
      Joachim Benemann
      18 PV in Europe, from 1974 to 2009: A Personal Experience
      Helmut Kiess
      18.1 Insight Period: 1974–1988
      18.2 Innovation Period during the Decade 1988–1998
      18.2.1 State of the Art in 1988: Some Details
      18.2.2 The Decade between 1988 and 1998
      18.2.3 State of the Art in 1998: Some Details
      18.3 Innovation and Industrial Production during the
      Decade between 1998 and 2008
      18.3.1 State of the Art in 2008: Some Details
      18.4 Epilogue
      19 France Did NotWant to Look for the Sun
      Alain Li´ebard and Yves-Bruno Civel
      20 More Electricity for Less CO2
      Yves Bamberger
      20.1 Electric Eco-Efficient End-Uses
      20.2 Achieving an Ever Lower-Carbon Electricity Mix
      with Nuclear and Renewables
      20.3 Networks: A Tool for Pooling Production and
      Integrating Renewable Energies
      20.4 Carbon-Free Electric Mix as an Opportunity to
      Develop New Industrial Facilities
      21 The History of Renewable Energies in the Canary Islands,
      Especially in Tenerife
      Ricardo Melchior and Manuel Cendagorta
      22 WhyWas Switzerland Front-Runner for PV in the 90s but
      Lost the Leadership after 2000?
      Thomas Nordmann
      23 Solar Power in Geneva, Switzerland
      Philippe Verburgh
      23.1 A First-Class Solar Potential
      23.2 The "5 MW Solar" Project and the "SIG Vitale
      Range"
      23.3 A Sunny Future for Geneva
      24 The PV World Conference in Vienna
      Wolfgang Hein
      25 Abandoning Nuclear in Favor of Renewable Energies: The
      Life Story of Giuliano Grassi—Florence, Italy
      Giuliano Grassi
      25.1 First Period: Beginning of My Professional Activity
      as Engineer
      25.2 Second Period: Transition from Electro-Mechanical
      to Nuclear Activity
      25.3 Third Period: Renewable Energies
      25.4 Concluding Remarks
      PART IV PV IN ASIA: A DRAGON ISWAKING UP
      26 PV in Japan: Yesterday, Today and Tomorrow 417
      Osamui Ikki and Izumi Kaizuka
      26.1 History
      26.2 Current Status of PV in Japan
      26.3 New Support Framework for PV
      26.4 Conclusion
      27 Leaders of the Early Days of the Chinese Solar Industry
      Qin Haiyan
      27.1 Turning a Dream into a Reality: The Story of
      Huang Ming
      27.2 The Richest Man in China: The Story of Shi
      Zhengrong
      27.3 Internationalization and a Traditional Chinese Soul:
      The Story of Miao Liansheng
      27.4 Development Led by Technology: The Story of
      Gao Jifan
      28 Review of China’s Solar PV Industry in 2009
      Gao Hu
      29 Lighting theWorld: Yesterday, Today and Tomorrow
      Biswajit Ghosh
      29.1 Light and Energy
      29.2 Path toward Initiatives on PV Research
      29.3 PV in India and International Scientific
      Cooperation
      29.4 Lighting the Remote
      29.5 Views of the Author
      PARTV PVFOR A BETTER DEVELOPING WORLD
      30 Photovoltaics in the World Bank Group Portfolio
      Anil Cabraal
      30.1 World Bank Group Photovoltaics Projects
      30.2 Business Models for Off-Grid Service
      30.3 Key Lessons of Experience
      30.4 Guidelines for Designing Sustainable Off-Grid
      Projects
      30.5 Future Support for Photovoltaics
      31 Illiterate Rural Grandmothers Solar-Electrifying Their Own
      Villages
      Bunker Roy
      31.1 Ground-Breaking Innovation in the Field of
      Technology
      31.2 Sustainable Development: Now and in the Future
      31.3 Innovation and Its Practical Application
      31.4 Demystifying of 21st Century Technology in
      19th Century Conditions—Management, Control
      and Ownership in the Hands of the Rural Poor
      around theWorld
      31.5 Present and Future Impact of Innovation: Number
      of People Affected
      31.5.1 Renewable Energy
      31.5.2 Continent of Africa
      31.5.3 Global
      31.5.3.1 Providing an answer to a major
      challenge-tackling global climate
      change from the community level
      32 Early PV Markets and Solar Solutions in South Asia
      Neville Williams
      33 Photovoltaic Power Systems for Lifting Women Out of
      Poverty in Sub-Saharan Africa
      Dominique Campana
      33.1 Solar Energy against the "Energy Poverty" Trap
      33.2 In Conclusion
      34 Promoting PV in Developing Countries
      Bernard McNelis
      34.1 Looking at Solar
      34.2 Into PV
      34.3 Into All Things Solar
      34.4 Into Intermediate Technology
      34.5 Into Africa
      34.6 Global Solar Pumping Programme
      34.7 IT Power
      34.8 Mali
      34.9 Dominican Republic
      34.10 China
      34.11 Robert Hill
      34.12 EPIA
      34.13 World Bank,Washington, Corruption
      34.14 Other Countries, People, Institutions
      34.15 Where DoWe Go from Here?
      PART VI PV FOR THEWORLD
      35 On the International Call for Photovoltaics of 2008
      Daniel Lincot
      36 AWorld Network for Solar R&D: ISES
      Monica Oliphant
      37 Three Steps to a Solar System: From 1% to 40% and 100%
      Harry Lehmann
      37.1 Equal Treatment
      37.2 A Further Step: Coming Out of the Niche
      37.3 Full Solar Supply or the "Great Transformation"
      37.4 Scenarios: A Look into the Present and the
      Future
      37.5 To Sum Up I Can Say: 100% Solar System Is
      Possible!
      38 SolarBank
      Michael T. Eckhart
      38.1 Landmark Solar PV Study in 1978
      38.2 Away from PV for 15 Years
      38.3 Return to Solar PV in 1995
      38.4 World Bank 1996–1998
      38.5 India 1996–2001
      38.6 South Africa 1997–2002
      38.7 Europe 1997–2004
      38.8 ACORE 2001–Present
      38.9 Bonn 2004, WIREC 2008, and IRENA
      38.10 SolarBank Looking Forward
      39 Solar Power in Practice
      Stefan Behling
      40 AWorld in Blue
      Bernd Melchior
      40.1 From Butterflies to aWorld in "Blue": How Did This
      Happen?
      40.2 New Treatment for Porous Materials to Conserve
      Monuments Like the Dome of Cologne
      40.3 Process Steps for a Treatment with the
      Autoclave
      40.4 Translucent Insulation Material
      40.5 My Start into Photovoltaic
      40.6 Changing DC Current into AC Current
      40.7 Diffuse Light Concentrator
      40.8 Tracking and Concentration Systems
      40.9 The ADS Concept: Autonomous, Decentralized,
      Sustainable
      40.10 The Blue Mountain
      40.11 ADS Robinson Club on Fuerteventura
      40.12 First Bungalow in theWorld Realized in ADS:
      "Casa Solar", Almunecar, Spain
      40.13 Solar Powered Container: 3000 km Trip to 7th EU
      Photovoltaic Solar Conference and Exhibition in
      Seville, Spain, October 1986
      40.14 A Solar Powered OrthopedicWorkshop Container
      for a Hospital in Tanzania
      40.15 Integration of Photovoltaic into Roofs: "Sunflate"
      40.16 SUNCLAY + SUNERGY: A Two-Component
      Photovoltaic System for the Harmonic, Aesthetic
      and Flexible Integration into the Architecture of
      Roof
      40.17 Next Generation Photovoltaic
      40.18 New Generation of Solar Clay Tiles
      40.19 The Combination of Solar and Wind BSWT
      41 Factory for Sale, or the Long and StonyWay to Cheap Solar
      Energy: The Story of the Thin-Film CdTe Solar Cells; First
      Solar and Others—A Semi-Autobiography
      Dieter Bonnet
      42 High Efficiency Photovoltaics for a SustainableWorld
      Antonio Luque
      42.1 Introduction
      42.2 The 2008 Spanish Boom
      42.3 A Market Forecast Model
      42.4 The FULLSPECTRUM Project and the ISFOC
      42.5 Summary
      43 Nonconventional Sensitized Mesoscopic (Gr¨atzel) Solar
      Cells
      Michael Gr¨atzel
      44 Solar Bicycles, Mercedes, Handcuffs—PlusEnergy Buildings
      Gallus Cadonau
      44.1 AWorldwide Unique Solar Decision: Tour de Sol
      44.1.1 CO2-free Hotel Ucliva in the Swiss Alps:
      1st Solarcar Race of theWorld
      44.1.2 Tour de Sol 1985: Solar Bicycles and
      Mercedes Benz
      44.1.3 First Solarcar Driving Past an Atomic
      Power Plant
      44.1.4 Geneva—Final Stage of the 1st Tour de Sol
      1985: The Power of the Sun
      44.1.5 Tour de Sol 2 in 1986: Massachusetts
      Institute of Technology in the Roadside
      Ditch
      44.1.6 Welding and Sweating Instead of
      Champagne
      44.1.7 Strong Solar Teams from Germany and the
      Swiss School of Engineering Biel
      44.1.8 Solar Cells for "Independency" or
      Terrestrial PV Utilisation?
      44.1.9 Tour 3 in 1987: Huge Interest and
      "Chermobiles"
      44.1.10 Huge International Media Coverage
      44.1.11 Tour Organisation and Its Regulations
      44.1.12 Tour de Sol Protests and Appeals in Court?
      44.1.13 Solar Mountain Race: Through 360 Curves
      to Arosa/GR
      44.2 World’s First Energy Feed-in System in
      Burgdorf/BE
      44.2.1 Tour de Sol in France: Solar Energy Instead
      of Air Pollution
      44.2.2 World’s First Energy Feed-in System in
      Burgdorf/BE: "Grid Interconnection"
      44.2.3 The Principles of Solar Energy Use: Best
      Technology or Self-Sufficiency?
      44.2.4 Tour de Sol 4 in 1988: PV Innovation and
      Financing Are Getting Broader
      44.2.5 PV on Land and onWater
      44.2.6 Solar Energy Is Getting Increasingly
      Popular Also for Groups and Managers
      44.2.7 Safety, Recuperation and Road Capability in
      Winter
      44.2.8 Solar Power: A Friendly Alternative
      44.2.9 Tour de Sol: "A Hotbed for Solar-Electric
      Mobility"
      44.2.10 Car Makers, What Have You Done in the
      Past?
      44.2.11 Tour de Sol and the International Solarcar
      Federation (ISF)
      44.2.12 Rail 2000 and Solarcars in Double-Deck
      Coaches
      44.2.13 The Ideal SOLARCAR 2000: Emission-Free
      Traffic Circulation in the 21st Century
      44.3 The Solar Alternative in Road Traffic:World Solar
      Challenge
      44.3.1 The Solar Alternative in Road Traffic
      44.3.1.1 Two hundred years after the
      French Revolution: The Solar
      Revolution (1989)
      44.3.1.2 California’s Clean Air Act,
      Zero-Emission Vehicles, PV
      Program for 1000 kW Roofs
      44.3.1.3 First alpine crossing with
      solarcars: The Sun conquers the
      Gotthard Pass in 1989
      44.3.1.4 Solarcar: A danger for 150 pigs?
      44.3.1.5 Alpine tests at the 1st European
      Championship of Alpine
      Solarcars (ASEM) in 1989
      44.3.1.6 Bea Vetterli’s solarcar in the
      mountains: downhill with more
      than 100 km/h
      44.3.1.7 St. Moritz: 1st ASEM finish and
      1st electric light in Switzerland
      44.3.1.8 The British and St. Moritz:
      Inventors of winter tourism
      44.3.1.9 Clean Energy St. Moritz: The
      overall energy concept
      44.3.1.10 Last Tour de Sol in 1991
      44.3.1.11 Solarcar world record: 148 km/h
      at the ASEM 1995
      44.3.2 World Solar Challenge in Australia and
      the US
      44.3.2.1 FirstWorld Solar Challenge in
      1987: 3005 km across Australia
      44.3.2.2 Japan’sWaterloo at the 1st WSC:
      Detlef Schmitz Missed the Start
      44.3.2.3 The SecondWorld Solar
      Challenge and its dangers in the
      Australian desert
      44.3.2.4 The "GREATEST RACE on EARTH,
      Creating a SOLUTION not
      POLLUTION"
      44.3.2.5 International Solar High-Tech
      Competition across Australia
      44.3.2.6 What technology and strategy
      was responsible for the victory?
      44.3.2.7 "Spirit of Biel": 1.8 dl (Solar) fuel
      for 100 km—55 times more
      efficient
      44.3.2.8 Great suspense and an odd cup in
      McLarens on the lake
      44.3.2.9 Detlef Schmitz: the friendly
      "Suitcase Man"
      44.3.2.10 Detlef: veteran and
      misadventurer at each WSC
      1987, 1990, 1993, 1996, 1999
      44.3.2.11 World Solar Challenge 1993:
      Japan invests millions in
      solarcars
      44.3.2.12 Honda changes its strategy for
      the WSC 1993
      44.3.2.13 WSC and Sunrayce in the US and
      other solar races in 1996
      44.4 Solar Prize, Handcuffs and PlusEnergy Buildings
      44.4.1 Swiss Solar Prize and Handcuffs
      44.4.1.1 Solar utilisation: from traffic to
      building sector
      44.4.1.2 "Solar 91: for an energyindependent
      Switzerland"
      44.4.1.3 First Solar Prize 1991 for world’s
      biggest solar surface per
      inhabitant
      44.4.1.4 Federal Councillor Adolf Ogi:
      initiative, courage and solar
      installations
      44.4.1.5 Handcuffs, excavators and solar
      electricity
      44.4.1.6 Ren´e B¨ artschi: "most successful
      Swiss governing councillor"
      44.4.1.7 Four times too much solar energy
      and a winter bathe
      44.4.1.8 European Commission, US
      Department of Energy and
      Japanese Industry
      44.4.1.9 Best integrated solar
      installations: without
      overbuilding cultural land
      44.4.1.10 The solar mission of the Federal
      Minister of Energy
      44.4.2 Solar Energy on the Rise
      44.4.2.1 European PV Conference in
      and popular initiative for solar
      energy
      44.4.2.2 European Parliament: Swiss
      Solar Prize—model for European
      Solar Prize
      44.4.2.3 Bonn-Cologne-Brussels-
      Amsterdam: more solar
      electricity than in Australia
      44.4.2.4 Federal Chancellor Vranitzky
      awards 1st European Solar Prize
      in Vienna
      44.4.2.5 Chancellor Vranitzky: "Central
      Europe free of nuclear power
      plants"
      44.4.2.6 First European Solar Prize goes
      to successful opponent of EDF
      44.4.2.7 City/Charter: implementation of
      the goals of Rio on municipality
      level
      44.4.2.8 Breakthrough in Parliament in
      1997: one CHF billion for solar
      energy
      44.4.2.9 Ucliva Agreement: first European
      Shell Solar factory in Switzerland
      44.4.3 Mephisto & Co against Solar Energy
      44.4.3.1 The wisdom of Arthur
      Schopenhauer and solar energy
      44.4.3.2 J.W. Goethe and "a very good
      dinner"—instead of solar energy
      44.4.3.3 Combat against renewable
      energies
      44.4.3.4 Millions for deception of citizens
      44.4.3.5 Economic war against innovative
      businesses
      44.4.3.6 Swiss economical functionaries:
      best work for the Chinese
      Communist Party
      44.4.3.7 Do authorities harass citizens
      that are loyal to the constitution?
      44.4.3.8 Solar energy instead of
      unconstitutional bureaucracy
      44.4.3.9 Constitutional right for solar
      building permit: new law within
      three months
      44.4.4 Market-Based Compensation for
      Renewable Energies
      44.4.4.1 Market-based compensation for
      billions of fossil-nuclear
      subsidies
      44.4.4.2 Prof. Dr. Ren´e Rhinow: best usage
      of revenues for measures
      44.4.4.3 European Court of Justice 2001:
      grid feed-in is not tax
      44.4.4.4 Democratic decision of the
      electricity consumer on energy
      investments
      44.4.5 Best Innovative Entrepreneurs for
      Sustainable Economy
      44.4.5.1 Small- and medium-sized
      entrepreneurs are the most
      innovative
      44.4.5.2 Biogas—compo-gas: 1 kg of
      banana peel = 1 km of car drive
      44.4.5.3 Solar house on the Federation
      Square: built in 22 hours
      44.4.5.4 Swiss Solar Prize for first
      PlusEnergy Building
      44.4.5.5 Shell’s solar factory in
      Gelsenkirchen: "we want to earn
      money"
      44.4.5.6 Lord Norman Foster on the 15th
      Swiss Solar Prize 2005
      44.4.5.7 PlusEnergy Buildings for Alpine
      resort: 175% Self-Supply
      44.4.5.8 Energy-intensive industrial
      PlusEnergy Building: 125%
      self-supply
      44.4.5.9 Installed PV performance: world
      leader in 1992—last in 2008
      44.4.5.10 Sustainable economy: amateur
      becomes world champion
      44.4.5.11 China could outrun all—
      economically and ecologically
      44.5 PEB Cover 75% ofWorld’s Energy Demand
      44.5.1 From Solar Collectors to PlusEnergy
      Buildings
      44.5.1.1 Conclusion of Tour de Sol, WSC as
      well as Swiss and European Solar
      Prize
      44.5.1.2 Energy efficiency: "Sine qua non"
      of PlusEnergy Buildings
      44.5.1.3 PlusEnergy Buildings (PEB) with
      a self-supply between 100% and
      200%
      44.5.1.4 PV and refurbishment of a
      6-family house: energy needs
      reduced by 90%
      44.5.1.5 PV on PlusEnergy Buildings: the
      level of building technology of
      2010
      44.5.1.6 PV and refurbishment of a
      12-family house: energy needs
      reduced by 93%
      44.5.1.7 Energy-intensive business
      buildings as PlusEnergy
      Buildings
      44.5.2 PV-PEB Cover 75% ofWorld’s Energy
      Consumption
      44.5.3 Stanford: "Clearly, Enough Renewable
      Energy Exists"
      44.5.4 First European Award for PlusEnergy
      Buildings of CHF(≈$) 100000
      Index

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