Solar power
Revision as of 23:03, 25 April 2014 by Woozle (talk | contribs) (Created page with "<hide> page type::article thing type::power source </hide> ==About== Solar power is one of the two types of sustainable power that can be generated in almost a...")
About
Solar power is one of the two types of sustainable power that can be generated in almost any location.
There are two major forms:
- /photovoltaic, i.e. "solar cells"
- /concentrated, typically using a heat engine to generate electricity
Related
- sustainable power
- There are no sustainable energy sources: a common myth
Links
Reference
- Wikipedia
- Conservapedia
"solar power is not very efficient, giving much less energy than oil. Many liberals have tried to force solar power onto many areas, despite the fact that it would be very costly and would be much more inefficient than oil, for example."
dKosopedia: no information as of 2014-04-25- SourceWatch redirects to sourcewatch:Solar energy as an alternative to coal
News
- 2014/04/03 [L..T] Energy breakthrough uses sun to create solar energy materials "Researchers have discovered a way to tap the sun not only as a source of power, but also to directly produce the solar energy materials that make this possible. This breakthrough could make the sun almost a 'one-stop shop' that produces both the materials for solar devices and the eternal energy to power them."
- 2014/03/22 [L..T] Solar Power Is A Huge Water Saver (World Water Day Infographic)
- 2013/07/16 [L..T] With Citizen Buy-in, German Village Generates 5X Renewable Energy It Needs
- 2011/05/27 [L..T] Water Use May Decide Future of Centralized Solar Power "Nuclear and coal may be big offenders, but wet-cooled concentrating solar power uses even more water per MWh of electricity generated. Dry-cooled CSP cuts water consumption significantly, but it's still far more than solar power from photovoltaics (or wind power)."
- 2010/04/16 [L..T] Solar power in Ontario could produce almost as much power as all U.S. nuclear reactors, studies find "Solar power in southeastern Ontario has the potential to produce almost the same amount of power as all the nuclear reactors in the United States, according to two new studies."