TUESDAY 14 APRIL, 2009 |

Space Based Solar Power A Reality By 2016?
by Energy Matters

The idea of harvesting solar power from space via orbiting
solar
farms has been around for a while, but may be closer to reality than many of
us realised.
The solar energy available in space is up to ten times greater than on Earth as
there's no atmospheric or cloud interference to contend with, no real night and no
seasons. This means that if
solar
power could somehow be harvested from space, it could be a baseload resource
instead of an intermittent source of power.
Baseload issues are one the last frontiers in terms of many forms of renewable
energy and one of the few remaining arguments supporting the need for fossil
fuel or nuclear based power.
But how do you get the power from the
solar
panels affixed to orbiting platforms back to Earth? The general concept has
been to convert it to radio frequency energy for transmission to a receiving
station, which then converts it back into electricity.
While this technology may seem decades away, perhaps only possible next century;
US company Portland Gas & Electric is seeking approval from regulators for a
power purchase agreement with Solaren Corp., a Southern California company that
has contracted to deliver 200 megawatts of clean,
renewable
power from space over a 15 year period, commencing in 2016.
Solaren will place solar panels in earth orbit, transmit the energy to a
receiving station in Fresno County, which will then be converted to electricity
and fed into PG&E's power grid.
If successful, the pilot project could address issues such as the use of
environmentally
sensitive areas for sprawling solar farms. However, one issue that hasn't
been addressed is the energy required to produce and put these solar panels into
space versus the amount of energy they may generate - and that's where
space
elevators may come into play.
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