A Reality Check About Solar Panel Waste and the Effects on Human Health

By Dan Gearino, Inside Climate News

Having sat in many community hearings about solar power development, I am used to vivid descriptions of how photovoltaic panels might as well be dripping with harmful substances that will sicken people and livestock.

The concerns are pervasive, but almost completely separate from reality.

(Read this article at insideclimatenews.org)

For example, one of the recurring issues raised against solar development is the presence of cadmium in photovoltaic panels. But researchers have shown that cadmium is present in only a small share of panels; it makes up 0.1 percent or less of the mass of the panels in which it’s present; and the form of cadmium sometimes used in panels is different and safer than the form that leads to health concerns.

Annick Anctil, an engineering professor at Michigan State University, knows this research because she’s done a lot of it herself. And she can see that there is a disconnect between what experts know and what the public worries about.

“The fact is, we haven’t communicated that information very well to a large audience,” she said.

I got in touch with her this week to get her thoughts on a new opinion essay published in the journal Nature Physics that is a brief debunking of many of the major concerns about the toxicity of solar panels and the growing volume of panel waste.

Anctil says the essay, written by a team that includes people from the National Renewable Energy Laboratory and the Colorado School of Mines, gets the science right and has a clarity that could be a step toward increasing public understanding of health and safety issues related to solar power. (She wasn’t a co-author, although she knows several of the co-authors.)

Here are some of the main points:

Concerns about an increase in solar panel waste need to be placed in the context of how the amount of waste compares to other sources. Projections of panel waste are “a drop in the ocean,” the authors say, compared to waste categories like plastics, coal ash and municipal solid waste, and are also much less than e-waste like old phones and computers. The vast quantity of waste from all of those sources is a concern and we need to find ways to reduce waste, but solar panels are not a major issue in that larger conversation.
Solar panels do not contain harmful levels of the toxic materials that often get discussed at public hearings about development. The authors found no examples of solar panels for utility-scale development that contain arsenic, gallium, germanium or hexavalent chromium. A small share of panels contain trace amounts of cadmium, but this is a form of the metal that is stable and not a danger to human health.
The solar industry is taking a variety of steps to reduce waste and concerns about toxicity by extending the lifespan of panels, finding alternatives for certain materials and working on efficient ways to recycle panel components. The hope is that these efforts will mean that the actual amount of waste will be less than current estimates.

One thing I’ll add: Solar developers are responsible for decommissioning projects when they reach the end of their lives, and they often have to post a bond at the time of construction to cover the costs of an eventual teardown and restoration of land. If a company sells a project or goes out of business, regulators have a process for determining who inherits responsibility for decommissioning. Community leaders are often concerned about getting stuck with the costs of decommissioning, but there are straightforward ways to make sure that the people making money from the development are on the hook for those costs.

“We’re trying to address some of what to us seem like the biggest concerns that really need scientific data behind them, such as toxicity, the amount of waste, things like that,” said Heather Mirletz, the lead author and a Ph.D. candidate at the Colorado School of Mines and the National Renewable Energy Laboratory.

The paper is not new research. Instead, it is a compilation of the work of a variety of other researchers, designed to make a case about the safety of solar panels.

If I was a solar developer, I would print thousands of copies of this three-page piece and hand them to everybody at local hearings.

In those hearings, people who oppose projects will often talk about health concerns, reading things they got from internet searches or by sharing talking points from groups that oppose nearly all solar development. There are many examples in my reporting last year about opposition to solar projects in Ohio, including one instance of a county health official repeating some of the dubious claims.

Some of this is intentionally misleading, but I think it’s a mistake to say that most opposition to development is being done with ill intent. Many people are looking for good answers to their questions about health and safety.

Also, I want to make clear that there is a difference between saying that some health concerns about solar are inaccurate and saying that there are zero concerns.

Researchers like Anctil spend their days probing these questions and she is careful to specify that her findings are based on currently available data, and that the body of knowledge on this subject will continue to grow.

One of the big challenges as we enter a period of rapid growth in development is to explain what researchers know in a way that’s easy to understand.

Other stories about the energy transition to take note of this week:

UAW Says General Motors Will Allow Battery Plant Workers to Be Covered by Labor Deal: The United Auto Workers strike continues this week, but there are signs of progress. UAW President Shawn Fain has said that General Motors is now willing to allow workers at battery joint ventures to be included in the company’s union contract, as Tom Krisher reports for the Associated Press. The union views this as a breakthrough, although it is part of broader negotiations that remain in flux. The UAW is on strike at selected plants operated by GM, Ford and Stellantis, the parent company of Chrysler. One of the union’s big concerns is that wages and benefits will decrease as a large share of jobs shift to battery plants that are operated by automakers in partnership with battery companies.

There’s Surprisingly Little Evidence That EVs Will Require Fewer Workers: It is often repeated that the shift to electric vehicles will mean less of a need for auto workers. Emily Pontecorvo of Heatmap News has a story in which she asks what evidence exists to support this claim. She finds that there is little research that conclusively says that there will be less of a need for auto workers, and there is some evidence the need for workers will be about the same or even increase. This is a story that couldn’t be more timely, considering the UAW strike, and Pontecorvo makes a clear case for how many observers of the industry have been operating under what may be false assumptions.

Community Solar Is a Growing Option for People Who Can’t Do Rooftop Solar: Signing up for solar power may soon be as easy as signing up for Netflix, as Michael J. Coren reports for The Washington Post. He looks at the growth of community solar, which are subscription-based projects that allow people to benefit from solar without needing to put it on their roof. This option, available in more than 20 states, is popular with people who live in apartments or otherwise don’t have roofs that are well-suited for solar panels.

A Vermont Utility Plans to End Outages by Giving Customers Batteries: Green Mountain Power, a Vermont utility, is asking regulators to approve a plan to address problems with grid reliability by providing battery storage systems to the households most prone to power failures. This is an unusual proposal for a utility, but Green Mountain Power has been on the leading edge of encouraging the use of home-based batteries, as Ivan Penn reports for The New York Times.

Making Solar Energy as Clean as Can Be Means Fitting Square Panels Into the Circular Economy: We Recycle Solar is one of the companies trying to build a market for reusing and recycling solar panels and their materials. Like many businesses in a nascent industry, The Arizona-based company has advantages as an early mover but disadvantages because there isn’t much infrastructure yet for solar recycling, as my colleagues Emma Peterson and Wyatt Myskow report for ICN. This story is a reminder that most of the mass in a solar panel is glass, so despite all the talk of rare materials in the clean energy economy, the main task for a recycler is figuring out what to do with all that glass.

Inside Clean Energy is ICN’s weekly bulletin of news and analysis about the energy transition. Send news tips and questions to dan.gearino@insideclimatenews.org.

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