2015年5月27日星期三

US Department of Energy to provide US$32 million for solar workforce training, innovation

  • US$15 million will be used to help fund projects used to develop new designs for CSP collectors. Image: Martin Abegglen/Flickr
The US Department of Energy (DOE) has set aside US$32 million in funding in order to help build up the US solar market by training workers and spurring new innovations within the industry.

The DOE is providing up to US$12 million in order to grow a diverse and experienced workforce, including individuals in insurance, real estate and utility sectors. This missions falls in line with President Barack Obama’s goal of training 75,000 solar workers by 2020.

US$5 million will be used to fund projects focused on growing market transparency and access to solar energy datasets, while US$15 million will be allocated to help fund projects to develop new designs for concentrating solar power (CSP) collectors.

Elizabeth Sherwood-Randall, Deputy Secretary of Energy, said: “Last year, a new solar energy project was installed every two and a half minutes in the United States. “To ensure the continued growth of the U.S. solar industry and our clean energy economy, it is critical that we support workforce training programs that will give American workers the skills they need for well-paying jobs and also make sure American consumers have access to highly-trained, credentialed professionals when they choose solar to power their daily lives.”

2015年5月26日星期二

Adani Group plans 1GW solar park in Tamil Nadu - reports

  • Tamil Nadu
    The 1GW plant is expected to attract INR70 billion (US$1.1 billion) investment. Flickr: Gemma Amor
Indian industrial Group Adani is planning the construction of a 1GW Battery Pack in the Indian state of Tamil Nadu, according to local financial newspaper The Business Standard.
The plant is expected to attract INR70 billion (US$1.1 billion) investment.
Adani Group sources said a deal had been signed with the state government and the project is at an “exploratory” level.
The project will be developed in four phases at Kamuthi in Ramanathapuram district with Adani in the process of acquiring around 5,000 acres.
Adani has already announced plans for mega solar facilities in two Indian states, Gujarat and Rajasthan.
The Indian government plans to set up mega solar projects across India to help reach its 100GW by 2022 target. As part of this the Ministry of New and Renewable Energy aims to set up 25 solar power parks ranging between 500MW and 1,000MW in size over the next five years.
In January, Adani Enterprises, along with SunEdison, signed a memorandum of Understanding to build a US$4 billion vertically integrated PV manufacturing facility in Mundra, Gujarat.
In April, Adani also signed an MoU to jointly build a single 10GW PV power plant with the Government of Rajasthan in the province.

2015年5月25日星期一

Australia’s new Renewable Energy Target will ‘reduce large-scale solar potential by 80%’

  • Central institute of Technology
    John Grimes: 'It is very likely the RET target will be saturated with wind projects well before the point that solar out-competes wind in terms of economics'. Image: SunPower
Australia’s reduced Renewable Energy Target (RET) of 33,000GWh could scale back large-scale solar potential in the country by 80%, according to a leading industry figure.
John Grimes, chief executive of the Australian Solar Council, told PV Tech that under the new target there would be some large-scale solar projects, but only a fraction of what would have been delivered under the original 41,000GWh target to 2020.
He said the larger, original target “provided a lot of headroom” for large-scale solar.
Grimes added that because Australia has very good solar resources, as the cost of solar continues to fall, projects become increasingly price competitive with wind. Australian Solar Council modelling showed that in 2018-2020 there would have been significant take up of large-scale solar.
However, Grimes said: “Now the target has been cut, we expect a huge backlog of wind projects, which have been at a standstill for more than two years, to crack ahead as soon as possible. It is very likely the RET target will be saturated with wind projects well before the point that solar out-competes wind in terms of economics.”
In an interview with PV Tech published today Grimes discussed in detail what the new RET target means for the different solar segments in Australia with a wider outlook on the industry's future under prime minister Tony Abbott’s government.
In related news, the latest Budget delivered by Australia’s Treasurer Joe Hockey on 12 May, included a measure for small businesses to claim an immediate tax deduction for each and every item they purchase costing less than AUS$20,000, up from the previous AUS$1,000 threshold. The rule will last until July 2017.
Grimes said the new tax deduction could have the “unintended consequence” of causing a short-term boom in the commercial solar sector in Australia.
He claimed it was possible to install a 15kW array for under AUS$20,000 - adding: “It means if you are an astute business person you can now benefit through the RET target scheme and this tax write-off, so there’s actually never been a better time for businesses to buy solar than right now.”
“We expect to see a significant boost as a result.”

2015年5月24日星期日

United PV offers Yingli a financial safety net

  • United PV
    State-owned project firm United PV said it would ensure Yingli could "pull through". Source: United PV.
Chinese state-owned solar developer United PV has hinted that it would intervene should Yingli’s financial woes escalate.

The company’s CEO, Alan Li, told Bloomberg that the company would help Yingli “pull through”. Li said United, a Yingli customer, would work with other government owned companies to ensure Yingli was able refinance as required.
Yingli warned on its ability to meet future liabilities in its delayed annual report. Shares in the company plummeted but made a recovery after executives soothed investors’ fears by explaining its potential routes to new funds in order to meet its next RMB1 billion (US$161 million) bond repayment in October.
United PV was unavailable for comment at the time of publication.
Yingli CFO Yiyu Wang told PV Tech that the company was “gradually” decreasing its debt burden and associated interest repayments. Yingli has confirmed that it is looking for new investment either from a private share placement or in the form of a loan.
Wang said the company had not defaulted in the past under tougher market conditions and was confident it would not default now.
Trina Solar CEO Gao Jifan used a quarterly results call on Thursday to welcome "healthy" consolidation in the solar market.
Trina has overtaken Yingli as the largest module maker globally.

2015年5月21日星期四

Maharashtra government could increase renewable-energy threshold to 25,000MW

Looking to set its renewable-energy sights higher, the Indian state of Maharashtra’s government could potentially raise its target for renewable-source capacity from 14,400MW to 25,000MW.

Maharashtra’s proposed policy would look at tacking on an additional 14,400MW of grid-connected capacity in the state. From that amount, 7,500MW is slated to come from solar energy.

Maharashtra chief minister Devendra Fadnavis told local press on Wednesday: “We had prepared a renewable energy policy and it was put before the cabinet. However, the union minister said the state is among the seven states with a major solar potential... and hence, the target should be increased to 25,000MW.”

Other renewable sources expected to make up part of the 14,400MW total include wind energy-storage (5,000MW), bagasse-based co-generation (1,000MW), hydropower projects (400MW), industrial waste (300MW) and biomass (200MW.) These projects are all expected to be finished by 2020.

This new policy will see a large increase from the 2,500MW renewable-energy goal set in the state’s previous legislation, which was approved in 2008. Maharashtra already has 6,155MW in renewable-energy capacity.

Power produced through this proposed policy can be sold off to developers through bidding, but they will first have to sell the energy to any distribution company within the state in order to meet their renewable purchase commitment.

2015年5月20日星期三

Honolulu ordered to fund 3.1MW PV plant for air pollution violations

Authorities in Hawaii’s capital, Honolulu, have been ordered to finance a US$16 million solar system as a penalty for failing to curb air pollution from a city landfill site.
The US Environmental Protection Agency said the City and County of Honolulu had not installed the necessary measures to collect and control methane and other air pollutants from its Kapaa landfill site by a 2002 deadline.
Although a control system was eventually fitted in 2013, the EPA said in the interim substantial quantities of hazardous pollutants had escaped from the site, necessitating the penalty.
“Air emissions from a closed landfill are toxic, and can contribute to global warming,” said Jared Blumenfeld, EPA’s administrator for the Pacific Southwest. “If the proper systems had been in place at the landfill, over 343,000 tons of methane, and 6,800 tons of hazardous air pollutants and volatile organics would not have escaped to the atmosphere.”
In the settlement imposed by the EPA, Honolulu authorities will have to fund the solar project and pay a US$875,000 cash penalty.
The EPA said the project would involve the installation of solar arrays totalling 3.1MW on 50,000 square feet of buildings and open space area at the city’s waste-to-energy H-POWER facility by 2020.
“This settlement holds Honolulu accountable for past failures to collect and control toxic gases and greenhouse gas emissions from the Kapaa Landfill, but it also lays the foundation for better environmental stewardship in the future,” said assistant attorney general John C. Cruden for the Justice Department’s Environment and Natural Resources Division. “Residents who call Oahu home will realise the benefits of this agreement – which includes clean solar power production and reduced reliance on fossil fuels – for many years to come.”

2015年5月19日星期二

Former SolarCity CFO Robert D. Kelly named a member of Mosaic’s Board of Directors

Residential Monocrystalline Solar Panels financing platform Mosaic has announced that Robert D. Kelly will serve as a member of the company’s Board of Directors.
Kelly — who recently retired from his post as chief financial officer at SolarCity — will join Tom Dinwoodie and Lisa Gansky on the Mosaic board.
Billy Parish, CEO of Mosaic, said: "Bob has unparalleled solar finance experience, including bringing SolarCity public and achieving the solar industry's first securitization. His accomplishments have accelerated the growth and adoption of solar nationwide."
Kelly added: "I'm thrilled to be joining Mosaic's board of directors; the company is a leader in the residential solar finance space, offering the best loan products and a proven technology platform. I look forward working with Mosaic to help guide their successful expansion.”
During his time at SolarCity, Kelly helped lead the company through its initial public offering in 2012. Before serving at SolarCity, Kelly was the chief financial officer at Calera — a clean technology company aimed at reducing CO2 emissions by converting it into useful materials.
Prior to his tenure at Calera, Kelly was chief financial officer and executive vice president at Calpine, overseeing the company’s IPO. Under Kelly’s watch, Calpine’s electricity generation capacity grew from 1MW to 25,000MW.

2015年5月18日星期一

Hanwha Q CELLS adds 45MW to UK portfolio

Tier one module supplier Hanwha Q CELLS connected two new solar plants with a total capacity of 45MW in the UK prior to the country’s 1.4 Renewable Obligation Certificate deadline.
The supplier worked alongside its development partner Golden Square Energy (GSE) to put the 24.8MW Green End solar farm and 20.4MW Fenland Farm project, both in Cambridge, into operation.
Planning consent was received for Fenland Farm in November 2014 and for Green End in December, and Hanwha tasked GSE – a joint venture between AG Renewables and Ingenious Clean solar Energy – with the construction and grid connection of both projects.
Hanwha provided Q CELLS Q.Pro-G3 modules and has assumed the operations and maintenance of both plants, which take the supplier’s UK portfolio to 70MW in capacity.
Mauro di Fiore, VP global EPC/utility at Hanwha Q CELLS, said the company was satisfied with its partnership with GSE and would look to collaborate with them in the future.

2015年5月17日星期日

SolarWorld expects US cell plant to reach 430MW of PERC production in Q2

Integrated PV module manufacturer SolarWorld said its Passivated Emitter Rear Cell (PERC) technology had proved a big hit in the US market and would reach 430MW of production capacity at its US-based plant in Hillsboro, Oregon, in the second quarter of 2015. 
SolarWorld had already upgraded around 330MW of cell production to PERC at its Hillsboro plant and expected a further 100MW to be migrated to PERC during the second quarter of this year.
Upgrades to PERC technology were said to have started at its plants in Freiburg and Arnstadt, Germany, in the first quarter of 2015. 
SolarWorld’s overall manufacturing strategy in 2015 is to increase production capacity to meet strong demand, notably in the US and harmonise cell production at all three plants to PERC processes. The company is targeting production above 1GW in 2015. 
The company noted that capital expenditures related to production expansion and upgrades at its German plants totalled €1.3 million (US$1.48 million) and €4.7 million at its Hillsboro plant in the US. 
Investments in plant, property and equipment totalled €9.3 million in the first quarter of 2015, up from €2.6 million in the prior year period.
Monocrystalline wafer production was also said to have restarted at the former Bosch facility in Arnstadt with one production unit. Three other units are expected to restart production, though the company did not provide timelines. 
SolarWorld had noted that monocrystalline modules using PERC cell technology had been in strong demand in the US as well as for its 72-cell product offering used in utility-scale projects. 

Q1 financials

SolarWorld reported groupwide shipments of solar power modules and kits of 202MW in the first quarter, 44% higher than the prior year period. The company noted that the increase in shipments was due to increased demand in the US, which accounted for 116MW of shipments, compared to only 43MW in the prior year period, accounting for 57% of quarterly shipments. 
“The signs point to growth. We will boost shipments and revenue, expand our capacities to this end and will further increase our efficiency and cost structure, not least by investing in new technologies,” stated Dr.-Ing. E. h. Frank Asbeck, CEO of SolarWorld AG. “On this basis, we will achieve a positive EBIT without potential one-off effects in the entire fiscal year 2015 as planned.” 
Revenue in the first quarter was €149.1 million, up 50% from the prior year period and down from €164.4 million in the fourth quarter of 2014. Consolidated earnings (EBITDA) increase to €2.9 million, up from €1.6 million in the prior year period. EBIT was negative €8 million.
SolarWorld reiterated total shipments would increase by at least 25% compared with 2014 and exceed 1GW for the first time. Revenue is also expected to increase by around 25% to above €700 million.

2015年5月14日星期四

Azure Power commissions 100MW in India

Indian independent power producer Azure Power has commissioned its largest  solar plant under India's National Solar Mission (NSM) policy — a 100MW installation in Jodhpur, Rajasthan.
Azure Power won the plant under the NSM Phase-2 Batch I to provide power to Solar Energy Corporation of India for 25 years.
With this facility now commissioned, Azure Power is now the single largest owner and operator of solar PV plants under the NSM with a combined operational capacity of 142MW. The company commissioned the plant in under eight months.
Inderpreet Wadhwa, founder and chief executive officer at Azure Power, said: "With the commissioning of this 100 MW plant we have once again demonstrated our strong project development, engineering and execution capabilities. This is the largest capacity project under the NSM Phase-2, where the power is being sold to Solar Energy Corporation of India (SECI) at INR 5.45 /KWhr with Viability Gap Funding. This is almost a 70% reduction in price of solar power since our first project in 2009 and we are pleased to make this contribution towards attaining grid parity for solar power.”

2015年5月13日星期三

REC Solar to use Elkem’s polysilicon as acquisition closes

The acquisition of PV module manufacturer REC Solar was said to have been completed by Norway-based Elkem Group, owned by Chinese investment firm China National Bluestar Group. 
REC Solar ASA separately announced that as the deal had been ratified it would start winding-down procedures having secured payment of approximately NOK4.298 billion (US$584.2 million), equivalent to NOK107.45 per share. REC Solar ASA was previously publically listed in Norway.
Steve O’Neil, REC’s new CEO who joined the company on March 25, 2015, said: “I am proud to join REC at such an exciting time. The combination of the two companies will provide a strong platform to further develop REC as a leading global provider of solar energy solutions. With predicted solar generation costs as low as 2-4 eurocents per kilowatt hour by 2050, Solar Pumping System is expected to be the world’s most common energy source. By this transaction, we will further boost our pole position in utilising this incredible potential.”
REC Solar also noted that it would be purchasing unspecified amounts of polysilicon from Elkem Solar Silicon in the future after evaluations and qualifications have been made in ingot production at its manufacturing facilities in Singapore. 
However, the company told PV Tech that it was still too early to say what the polysilicon quantities would be or the impact this may have of potentially reducing purchases of polysilicon from former sister company REC Silicon in the future. 
However, in the REC Solar statement it was made clear that the ambition of REC and Elkem was to boost their market position as an integrated PV player as well as supporting Elkem Solar Silicon re-entering the PV market having exited the sector several years ago. 
REC Solar has been capacity constrained in 2014, despite adding capacity and needs further capital allocation from Elkem to build further capacity. 
REC Silicon has yet to respond publically to the potential loss of orders and revenue from the Elkem acquisition of REC Solar. 

2015年5月12日星期二

United PV acquires five solar plants from Guodian


  • China flag
    United PV aims to purchase large-scale solar developments in 2015, with activity spreading over Northwest, Northern, Eastern and Southern China. Image: Fotopedia
United Photovoltaics Group (United PV) has acquired five solar power plants with a combined capacity of 210MW from power producer Guodian, in the Inner Mongolia and Zhejiang Province, China.
The aggregate consideration for the purchase is approximately RMB190 million (US$31 million).
After a year of strategic planning, United PV aims to purchase large-scale solar developments in 2015, with activity spreading over Northwest, Northern, Eastern and Southern China. The firm also aims to speed up the installation of its own solar plants over the year.
The acquired plants include:
In Inner Mongolia
  • 30MW in Chahaeryouyiqianqi
  • 60MW in in Keerqinzuoyizhongqi
  • 50MW in Shangdu County
  • 40MW in Linxi County
In Zhejiang Province
  • 30MW in Haining City
United PV’s largest shareholder is China Merchants New Energy Group, a leading solar power plant investor and operator in China.
In related news, United PV’s subsidiary Guodian Chahaeryouyiqianqi Solar Power Company entered into a financial lease agreement with the Industrial and Commercial Bank of China Inner Mongolia, to obtain RMB400 million (US$64 million) of financing, with a floating interest rate of 8%, benchmark for long-term loan.
The proceeds will be used for expenditures in Guodian Chahaeryouyiqianqi’s EPC project costs, and the development of the 50MW solar power plant in Chahaeryouyiqianqi.

2015年5月11日星期一

Principal Solar chooses Alpha Energy as EPC partner for 100MW plan

Solar power company Principal Solar announced that is has selected Alpha Energy as its engineering, procurement and construction (EPC) partner to help develop the Principal Sunrise IV plant in Cumberland County, North Carolina.Construction on the project begins in May and is expected to be completed by the end of 2015.

Michael Gorton, CEO of PSI, said: “Alpha is a world leader in large-scale construction and solar projects. Their proven expertise and demonstrated commitment to the success of the project are an important asset as we bring this project on-line.”

With a generation capacity of 100MW, the installation will be the largest solar facility established east of the Rocky Mountains. The plant has been tied to a 15-year power purchase agreement (PPA) with Duke Energy.

Drew Zogby, president and CEO of Alpha Technologies Services, said: “We are pleased to be working with PSI, a unique and growing solar company with high-quality projects. We look forward to developing this important project to meet demand for solar energy in North Carolina.”

2015年5月10日星期日

RET Capital names Michael Young as vice president, legal and administration


  • Michael Young previously worked at GCL Solar as general counsel. Image: Chandra Marsono/Creative Commons
RET Capital has appointed Michael Young as the company’s vice president, legal and administration.
Young will assist RET Capital in the fields of asset acquisition and finance, as well as offer added assistance in legal and administrative areas.
John A. Bohn, chief executive officer and chairman of RET Capital, said: “Michael brings years of first-rate experience in navigating the legal framework of energy project development. His expertise in conventional and renewable energy projects is highly regarded.”
Young previously worked at GCL Solar, where he served as general counsel and helped assist with all legal issues related to development, financing and operations of utility-scale pv panel mounting systems Prior to his time with GCL Solar, Young was the vice president, general counsel, at Hay Solar Holdings, a start-up renewable energy company in Ontario, Canada. Young has also seen time as senior attorunet and business developer at Montgomery Energy Partners LP, vice president and senior corporate counsel at NorthWestern Energy, and assistant general counsel at NRG Energy. in the US, Japan, Puerto Rico and India.

2015年5月5日星期二

From the lab to your digital device, quantum dots have made quantum leaps


Outside his career as a noted nanochemist, Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory (Berkeley Lab) director Paul Alivisatos is an avid photographer. To show off his photos, his preferred device is a Kindle Fire HDX tablet because "the color display is a whole lot better than other tablets," he says.What he may neglect to mention to the viewer is that not only did he take the photograph, he also helped invent the nanotechnology allowing the viewer to see those brilliant greens, rich reds, and bold blues, all while using significantly less energy. In fact, the Kindle display utilizes a technology manufactured by Nanosys, a startup Alivisatos cofounded in 2001 to commercialize quantum dots."Quantum dots offer very high color purity and can make a color display that has a wider color gamut, so it's very pleasing to the eye," Alivisatos said. "They're also very energy efficient."It was in his lab nearly 20 years ago that, along with collaborator Shimon Weiss, Alivisatos synthesized spherical nanocrystals made from a core of cadmium selenide inside a shell of cadmium sulfide. The remarkable thing about these quantum dots was that they could emit extremely pure light of almost any color, depending on their size.

Since then, Berkeley Lab's quantum dots have not only found their way into tablets, computer screens, and TVs, they are also used in biological and medical imaging tools, and now Alivisatos' lab is exploring them for solar cell as well as brain imaging applications.Because the size of quantum dots can be easily "tuned" -- different size dots emit different colors -- the realm of possible applications is vast. "There are many thousands of academic research groups around the world using quantum dots regularly," Alivisatos said.Nanosys, based in Milpitas, California, employs about 100 people and is producing 25 tons of quantum dots every year, enough for 10 million TVs. Quantum dots are inorganic nanocrystals made from semiconductors and comprise a new class of materials. "Their unique property is that their emission line width is very narrow, on the order of 30 nanometers," said Nanosys lead scientist Jian Chen. "It makes them very pure in color.

They're essentially the purest color phosphors out there."The displays in most electronics on the market today use liquid crystal display (LCD) screens, which typically involve shining a white light through a series of filters to produce the spectrum of colors. This results in wasted energy. Nanosys' quantum dots are designed to enhance the color and energy performance of LCD displays.It turns out that the core-shell structure of the quantum dots synthesized in Alivsatos' lab was a key breakthrough for achieving high light conversion efficiency. "By using the core-shell structure, the photon conversion efficiency can be as good as, or close to, 100 percent," Chen said. "What that means is, if 100 photons hit a quantum dot, almost 100 photons can be emitted by the quantum dot."Nanosys says its technology makes displays 20 percent more energy efficient, meaning longer battery life for the device. "Twenty percent doesn't sound like a huge amount, but when you consider that the display uses half the power of a tablet or device, it's actually a big improvement," said Nanosys spokesman Jeff Yurek.At some future point, Yurek says Nanosys may develop a lighting application for its quantum dots. "Quantum dots are the world's most efficient light emitter -- they're almost 100 percent efficient," he said. "There are interesting things you can do in terms of general lighting.

We could make an LED light bulb more efficient while having the color quality of an incandescent bulb. That's something further down the road for us."Alivisatos' other quantum dot company -- Quantum Dot Corp., which he cofounded in 1998 to commercialize use of quantum dots for luminescent labeling of biological tissues -- has since been acquired, and that technology is now found in biological and medical imaging tools made by Thermo Fisher Scientific.Meanwhile, he continues to work on quantum dots for other applications.

One of the main areas is brain research, the subject of a major scientific initiative announced by President Obama in 2013, Brain Research through Advancing Innovative Neurotechnologies (BRAIN)."For brain activity, quantum dots as we know them are not as likely to be useful for measuring membrane potential in neurons and things like that, but there are a lot of ideas for how to make new generations of quantum dots that would be sensitive to neurotransmitters, so there could be potential for neuroimaging," he said. "It's very early stage, but we're certainly working on stuff like that."Another possible application is for solar cells, which was the original focus of Nanosys when it was launched. "For a little while I was discouraged about the solar energy applications," Alivisatos said. "More recently, we've been working as a part of this (Dept. of Energy) Energy Frontier Research Center with groups at Caltech and the University of Illinois [the Light-Material Interactions in Energy Conversion Center led by the California Institute of Technology]. We have ideas for luminescence concentrators, where quantum dots may have very significant advantages for solar. So we have a new idea. It's not yet proven in the lab, but the early work is promising."

2015年5月3日星期日

Improved solar panels and printed electronics on the horizon with new material discovery

275W Monocrystalline Solar Panels

Published today in Nature Communications, University of Melbourne researchers say their discovery of the highly sought-after 'nematic liquid crystals' can now lead to vastly improved organic solar cell performance.Lead author Dr David Jones of the University's School of Chemistry and Bio 21 Institute, said these cells will be easier to manufacture, with the new crystals now able to work in cells that are double in thickness on the previous limit of 200 nanometers."We have improved the performance of this type of solar cell from around 8 per cent efficient to 9.3 per cent, finally approaching the international benchmark of 10 per cent."It means that consumers can look forward to more competitive pricing in the solar energy sector, and according to Dr Jones, the discovery is a shot-in-the-arm for the whole organic materials sector.

"The discovery is a step forward for the wider commercialization of printed organic solar cells. But more than this, could aid in the development of new materials with improved performance such as LCD screens."Uptake of the current generation of organic solar cells has lagged behind more widespread silicon-based models, due to their comparative lack of performance even with a simplified construction via large printers.

This is despite the organic models providing an unparalleled degree of versatility in how they are used; they can be shaped to fit nearly any surface area, as opposed to the traditional 'grid' formation of silicon-based cells."It had been theorized that a certain group of nematic liquid crystals would provide excellent electronic properties -- as well as being printable -- and therefore they had been sought for a long time," said Dr Jones. "With this research, we have shown for the first time these high performing materials.""We've seen recently at the annual Consumer Electronics Show (CES) in Las Vegas that printable electronics have an exciting future, as parts of phones and even cars. This discovery could help improve the performance of these solar cells, and lead to even more innovation in the coming years," concluded Dr Jones.