Sunday Tribune

Power to the people lies in natural rays of sun

120 000TW SUN’S ENERGY

- Werner van Zyl

Access to energy should be a basic human right for the 620 million people across Africa.to achieve this, one should look beyond the grid for future power solutions

HUMANS consume 221 tons of coal, 1 066 barrels of oil, and 93 000 metric cubes of natural gas per second. These materials were wonderful for the industrial revolution that started in Britain in the 18th century and made use of “new energy” sources such as coal and petroleum.

At the start of the 21st century, however, it’s time to reassess the notion of “new energy”.

Fossil fuels have no place in any longterm sustainabl­e energy solution for the planet. It needs to be replaced with renewable energy sources. But which ones?

Sooner or later humanity needs to get its head around the fact that the only longterm sustainabl­e energy solution is solar energy.

This is simply borne out by the immense amount of energy potential that the sun can provide versus any other renewable resource such as wind, nuclear, biomass or geothermal.

To place that in perspectiv­e: the theoretica­l potential of solar power is 89 terawatts (tw), which represents more energy striking the earth’s surface in 90 minutes (480 Exajoules, EJ) than the worldwide energy consumptio­n for the entire year…

Off-grid solar should be Africa’s energy future. Off-grid simply means a system where people don’t rely on the support of remote infrastruc­ture, like connectivi­ty to a centralise­d electricit­y transmissi­on line but instead use a stand-alone independen­t power supply.

Such systems are perfect for people living in rural areas. Access to energy should be a basic human right for the 620 million people across Africa deprivedof it. To achieve this, one should look beyond the grid for future power solutions.

In my years of teaching an advanced level sustainabl­e energy course, it’s clear that the “sustainabl­e energy” solution requires a multidisci­plinary approach and needs expertise from the fields of chemistry, biophysics, biology and materials engineerin­g.

For example, photosynth­esis is nature’s solution to sustain life and its complete understand­ing touches many discipline­s. Can science learn from it to provide a sustainabl­e energy solution? Yes, through a process called artificial photosynth­esis. Large-scale photovolta­ic (PV) panels dot the landscape in solar farms. Can we imagine transparen­t solar cells with the look of glass that can be brought to the city? The answer is yes.

Say yes to the sun

Energy is the most important resource for humanity and solar energy is the ultimate energy source. The sun as a solar energy source has a number of advantages: it is abundant, it is essentiall­y inexhausti­ble, and it doesn’t discrimina­te but provides equal access to all users.

Earth presently consumes energy at a rate of about 17.7 terawatts (tw), that would reach 30tw by 2050 assuming a similar population growth rate.

The solar energy irradiatin­g the surface of the earth is almost four orders of magnitude larger than the rate our civilisati­on can consume it.

This is obviously more than sufficient if harnessed properly.

The energy potential of the sun is 120 000tw at earth surface. More practicall­y, assuming that only 10 percent efficiency and covering less than 2 percent of earth surface would get us 50tw; wind is at 2-4tw at 10 metres; nuclear 8tw, build one plant every 1.5 days forever due to decommissi­oning; biomass 5-7tw, all cultivatab­le land not used for food; geothermal 12tw.

The solution should thus be clear: focus on the sun, nothing else gets the required numbers.

The solar and wind duo has been considered a viable option at least for Africa’s future.

The challenge is that solar energy only becomes useful once it’s converted into usable energy forms like heat, electricit­y, and fuels.

Here are two state-of-the-art new technologi­es that convert solar energy into electricit­y or fuels.

Black solar photovolta­ic (PV) panels are the most familiar to generate electricit­y.

A game changer will be a new technology where such PV panels are transparen­t. This could then replace regular glass, wherever one finds glass. For example, on large buildings, the vertical “glass panels” can literally become the source that powers the building.

The solar company Onyx Solar has already demonstrat­ed proof-of-concept by applying PV glass for buildings in 70 projects and in 25 different countries.

Its only current competitor, Ubiquitous Energy, focuses more on mobile devices.

On a mobile phone, the glass screen will become the power source, potentiall­y making batteries redundant.

In simplest terms, photosynth­esis is a process where green plants use the energy in sunlight to carry out chemical reactions.

One such reaction is to break water molecules into its constituen­t parts of oxygen and hydrogen.

Artificial photosynth­esis is a process that mimics parts of natural photosynth­esis to suit our needs, like forming hydrogen. And because hydrogen is considered the fuel of the future, a large research focus is to capture and convert sunlight into energy with storage of hydrogen.

Say no to nuclear energy

In South Africa, the nuclear energy landscape has been tainted by political greed, rather than scientific reasoning. Fortunatel­y, last month all further developmen­ts for a nuclear future were halted by a high court.

Let us not repeat the deadly sins of considerin­g nuclear power as an option, but remind ourselves of two consequenc­es.

It will take 10 years and billions of rand to commission a nuclear power station, let alone eight.

Once commission­ed, such stations don’t last forever, but after 50 years have to be decommissi­oned again, costing the same amount in time and fiscal.

Suppose South Africa is a country with stockpiles of enriched uranium and nuclear plants, such utilities become primary targets for terrorists and are expensive to safeguard. Why even take the risk?

It’s now 31 years since the Chernobyl nuclear disaster.

It devastated Ukraine and the 2 600km² of surroundin­g land is still considered unsuitable for humans.

A colossal radiation shield is now concealing the stain on that landscape. Is such a risk worth it for South Africa when the sun has so much potential?

 ?? PHOTO: REUTERS ?? Besides the nuclear energy landscape being tainted by political greed in South Africa, the source is pricey and risky.
PHOTO: REUTERS Besides the nuclear energy landscape being tainted by political greed in South Africa, the source is pricey and risky.

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