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Related: About this forumNew Study Examines Progress toward SunShot Initiative Goals, Identifies Emerging Solar Energy R&D…
(Please note, US Department of EnergyCopyright concerns are nil.)
http://energy.gov/articles/new-study-examines-progress-toward-sunshot-initiative-goals-identifies-emerging-solar
[font face=Serif][font size=5]New Study Examines Progress toward SunShot Initiative Goals, Identifies Emerging Solar Energy R&D Opportunities for 2020 and Beyond[/font]
May 18, 2016 - 11:17am
[font size=3]WASHINGTON Today, the Energy Department released the On the Path to SunShot reports, a series of eight research papers examining the state of the U.S. solar energy industry and the progress made to date toward the SunShot Initiatives goal to make solar energy cost-competitive with other forms of electricity by 2020. The solar industry is currently about 70 percent of the way towards achieving the Initiatives 2020 goals, but as solar has become more affordable, helping the industry grow by an astonishing 23-fold since the beginning of the Obama Administration, new challenges and opportunities have emerged.
The reports released today explore the lessons learned in the first five years of the ten-year Initiative and identify key research, development, and market opportunities that can help to ensure that solar energy technologies are widely affordable and available to power millions more American homes and businesses.
Solar energy is an integral part of our nations ongoing energy revolution, said U.S. Secretary of Energy, Dr. Ernest Moniz. The U.S. has over 10 times more solar installed today compared to 2011 when the SunShot Initiative was first launched, and the overall costs of solar have dropped by 65 percent. The Administrations continued efforts through the SunShot Initiative will help to further reduce costs to make solar energy more accessible and affordable for American families and businesses.
Launched in 2011, the SunShot Initiative was created with the goal to reduce the cost of solar energy technologies by 75 percent within a decade across the residential, commercial, and utility-scale sectors. Since then, solar technologies, solar markets, and the solar industry have changed dramatically. The On the Path to SunShot series serves as a follow-up to the 2012 SunShot Vision Study, which analyzed the economic and environmental benefits that would result from achieving SunShots ambitious 2020 goal. This new study series explores the areas of focus that could help the United States to achieve cost-competitive solar energy.
Among the conclusions from the study series, a recurring theme emerges that sustained innovation across all levels of the industryfrom cell efficiency improvements, to faster and cheaper installation methods will help to achieve the Energy Departments SunShot goals.
The On the Path to SunShot series was developed in collaboration with leading researchers from the National Renewable Energy Laboratory, Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory, Sandia National Laboratories, and Argonne National Laboratory.[/font][/font]
May 18, 2016 - 11:17am
[font size=3]WASHINGTON Today, the Energy Department released the On the Path to SunShot reports, a series of eight research papers examining the state of the U.S. solar energy industry and the progress made to date toward the SunShot Initiatives goal to make solar energy cost-competitive with other forms of electricity by 2020. The solar industry is currently about 70 percent of the way towards achieving the Initiatives 2020 goals, but as solar has become more affordable, helping the industry grow by an astonishing 23-fold since the beginning of the Obama Administration, new challenges and opportunities have emerged.
The reports released today explore the lessons learned in the first five years of the ten-year Initiative and identify key research, development, and market opportunities that can help to ensure that solar energy technologies are widely affordable and available to power millions more American homes and businesses.
Solar energy is an integral part of our nations ongoing energy revolution, said U.S. Secretary of Energy, Dr. Ernest Moniz. The U.S. has over 10 times more solar installed today compared to 2011 when the SunShot Initiative was first launched, and the overall costs of solar have dropped by 65 percent. The Administrations continued efforts through the SunShot Initiative will help to further reduce costs to make solar energy more accessible and affordable for American families and businesses.
Launched in 2011, the SunShot Initiative was created with the goal to reduce the cost of solar energy technologies by 75 percent within a decade across the residential, commercial, and utility-scale sectors. Since then, solar technologies, solar markets, and the solar industry have changed dramatically. The On the Path to SunShot series serves as a follow-up to the 2012 SunShot Vision Study, which analyzed the economic and environmental benefits that would result from achieving SunShots ambitious 2020 goal. This new study series explores the areas of focus that could help the United States to achieve cost-competitive solar energy.
Among the conclusions from the study series, a recurring theme emerges that sustained innovation across all levels of the industryfrom cell efficiency improvements, to faster and cheaper installation methods will help to achieve the Energy Departments SunShot goals.
The On the Path to SunShot series was developed in collaboration with leading researchers from the National Renewable Energy Laboratory, Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory, Sandia National Laboratories, and Argonne National Laboratory.[/font][/font]
Reports here: http://energy.gov/eere/sunshot/path-sunshot
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