Solar power stations in space could be the answer to our energy needs

Feb 23, 2020
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Space solar power is primarily constrained by launch costs. As these continue to decrease then it will certainly become more viable. I think it might be potentially interesting to use it in a polar orbit to supply places near the North and South Poles with power during dark periods. However, such systems have been proposed for a very long time. I would like to see NASA or similar space organizations perform some demonstration projects to give a proof of concept, because I think that would be something that could generate excitement and stir the imagination of the general public. Of course, this kind of technology would also be useful to help supply power to future Lunar colonies or possibly to bases on Mars.
 

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Nov 22, 2020
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Space solar power is primarily constrained by launch costs. As these continue to decrease then it will certainly become more viable. I think it might be potentially interesting to use it in a polar orbit to supply places near the North and South Poles with power during dark periods. However, such systems have been proposed for a very long time. I would like to see NASA or similar space organizations perform some demonstration projects to give a proof of concept, because I think that would be something that could generate excitement and stir the imagination of the general public. Of course, this kind of technology would also be useful to help supply power to future Lunar colonies or possibly to bases on Mars.
Why are launch cost decreasing?
 
Feb 23, 2020
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Some new rocket designs like those from SpaceX and other developments in private industry have reduced launch costs a bit. Others are due to advances in technology, in general. However, they have not come down nearly as dramatically as would be needed to support widespread use of Space Solar Power. .
 
Nov 24, 2020
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Solar power stations in space could be the answer to our energy needs

If the distance for beaming the energy back to Earth wouldn't hinder the project, then building the sun energy collectors on the moon could be the best solution.
Using the moon materials theoretically, the whole Moon surface facing the Earth could be covered. ( actually, the whole moon could be covered and the energy cabled to any spot from where the transfer to the Earth would be possible. )
If the process of material mining and the collectors manufacturing could be automated then the entire cost of the project will be 'just' with the minimum basics needed to be transferred to the Moon.
 
Apr 22, 2020
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Your only response to my question is a reference to accidents from decades ago.

It does not make sense that they should develop this technology, which as you say adds complexity and weight, if it is also more expensive overall. The stated reason is that it saves money over time by not having to build all-new boosters for every launch. While the hardware for an individual launch may be more expensive, the ability to re-use that hardware saves money for the ongoing program, and all these companies have ongoing programs for offering launch services. And that's a reason why launch costs are decreasing, which was the original question.
 
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Dec 2, 2020
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There are fundamental flaws with all space-based solar power schemes that put them firmly in the boondoggle category.

Most basically, we already have a space-based platform on which to collect solar energy: the Earth. And we are already placing solar panels on that platform at exponentially increasing rate and exponentially decreasing cost per kilowatt-hour. According to the International Energy Agency, in favorable locations solar power is already the “cheapest electricity in history” ( https://webstore.iea.org/world-energy-outlook-2020 ). Production of solar power on Earth occurs only during the day, but this approximately matches daily power demand and utilities are already fielding storage technologies to time-shift solar output as needed (flow batteries, lithium ion batteries, molten-salt thermal storage, and other technologies, all of which are sliding down cost-learning curves as experience grows and deployment ramps) -- and time-shifting is only needed at very high levels of supply penetration in any case. Plus, wind turbines run in the dark.

Any space-based form of solar power – with its launch systems, orbital power transmitters, huge centralized ground receivers, and the like – would, by the time it was deployed in 2050 or beyond, have to compete in cost per unit of energy generated ($/kWh) not with today’s already cheapest-of-them-all solar and wind but with the even lower costs these sources (and storage) will have achieved by that far-distant time. It would take divine intervention, lots, to make space-based power competitive under these conditions.

As a measure of the quality of thinking going on in this article, consider the following bit: “Researchers in China have designed a system called Omega, which they aim to have operational by 2050. This system should be capable of supplying 2GW of power into Earth’s grid at peak performance, which is a huge amount. To produce that much power with solar panels on Earth, you would need more than six million of them.”

Two of the numerous problems with this blob of pseudo-technical codswallop:

1) 2 GW is not a “huge amount” of power: it is noise-level compared to the 1,123 GW of wind and solar that, the International Energy Agency estimates, will be deployed globally in just the next 3-4 years: https://www.iea.org/reports/renewables-2020

2) Conjuring with context-free big numbers like “six million” is silly. The bottom line is not how many panels are needed but how much the energy ends up costing, and, as noted above, there is zero chance that energy from outer space will ever cost less than energy from ground-based panels that one can access via pickup truck. Or on foot. Which are already cheaper than oil, gas, coal, most wind, or newbuild nuclear ( https://www.lazard.com/perspective/lcoe2020 ). And are getting cheaper all the time.

Of course, if spaceflight is one’s religion, anything that would involve lotsa, lotsa spaceflight, no matter how hare-brained or costly, will seem worthy of promotion. But the rest of us need not treat such effusions as serious engineering visions.
 
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Jul 27, 2020
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Had to look up codswallop. Never came across that one before. Seems reasonable, as does most or your post.

Just one issue I have always wondered about:

Production of solar power on Earth occurs only during the day, but this approximately matches daily power demand and utilities are already fielding storage technologies to time-shift solar output as needed (flow batteries, lithium ion batteries, molten-salt thermal storage, and other technologies,

Many incorrectly state that solar is only good during the day, and you brought up some examples of storage, except my favorite. Since you seem to be well versed in this aspect of energy generation, you might be able to address this issue, hopefully with none of the codswallop often found in other treatments.

Solar power can be used to create one of the most useful energy sources on the planet: molecular hydrogen. This gas can be produced by electrolysis of water, and used directly, or compressed and shipped as a liquid all over the world. Hydrogen powered fuel cells are very efficient and the pollution is practically zero since it gives back what it was derived from - water.

Any chance of this playing a major role in "solar power by other means"? We could all have fuel cells to power our homes, etc. And no more black-outs from storms, etc.

But is it feasible? Storage batteries, etc. clearly will work, but which is going to be the most efficient and widely practical. Many are not easily portable, very important for any "universal" energy source. H2 fuel cells sound like the answer. Super clean, and very efficient.

Many think of the Hindenburg disaster whenever hydrogen safety issues come up. But burning petrol is much more hazardous than burning H2. The petrol falls to the ground and burns everything around it, until it is gone. Burning H2 rapidly rises from the ground, limiting damage.

If we can transport that horrible petroleum, and its liquid fuel products all over the world, by ship, rail and truck, why not liquid hydrogen?!
 
Dec 4, 2020
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All the comments seem to focus on costs and feasibility of the space solar technology, but you are all missing the elephant in the room. We have a planet which is already heating up because of sh*t we have been doing wrong and now you want to capture even more energy and beam it down here?!?!?! That's only going to make global warming even worse!!!!!
 
Jul 27, 2020
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you want to capture even more energy and beam it down here?!?!?! That's only going to make global warming even worse!!!!!

Global warming results from the release of greenhouse gases. The energy that heats the planet comes primarily from the sun. The gases trap the solar heat near the surface. It is the gases, not the energy, that is of concern.

Energy sources that do not release such gases will not significantly enhance global warming.
 
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