Solar

“First of its kind” solar panel upcycling plant on cards after federal grant win

Published by

A Melbourne-based company has won a federal government grant to set up a first of its kind solar panel upcycling plant, to transform potentially hazardous solar panel waste into value-added materials.

The initiative is led by industrial manufacturing company Ojas Group – the grant recipient – in partnership with RMIT and the University of Melbourne.

The aim of the new entity, called Elecsome, is to build a national network of collection points and facilities to provide cost-effective and environmentally sustainable PV solar panel upcycling services in Australia.

The $3 million grant awarded to Ojas Group via the federal government’s latest round of Cooperative Research Centres Projects (CRC-Ps) will help to get that plan underway.

“The Morrison government is committed to supporting innovative ideas and assisting researchers and industry develop real-world solutions to issues facing Australia and the world,” said federal minister for industry, science and technology, Karen Andrews, in a statement on Wednesday.

“Now more than ever it is vital businesses and researchers work together to collaborate on outcomes which will generate opportunities and jobs as the nation continues its economic recovery from the Covid-19 pandemic.”

According to the Elecsome website, the technology behind the up-cycling venture is backed by “years of research” at both RMIT and the University of Melbourne.

The technology claims to be able to up-cycle 97 per cent of each PV panel, with the glass used as concrete fill, replacing sand, and as other construction material including road base material.

Aluminium frames are repurposed for cans and other solar panel frames, among other things, and the electrical conductors are re-used in electrical goods. Elecsome says EVA polymer silicon will be recycled, repurposed and distributed to other industries as raw material.

The plan is to set up the factories in regional areas, to create employment opportunities, and for each factory to have a capacity of 50 tonnes of solar panel throughput.

How to sustainably manage PV panels at the end of their working lives has become an increasingly pressing issue for the industry, as rooftop solar uptake continues to boom among Australian households and businesses.

At this stage, Australia has just one dedicated solar panel recycler – Adelaide-based Reclaim PV – with more and more promising leads emerging from research coming out of various universities and spurred by backing from ARENA.

In New South Wales, a $10 million government grant scheme was launched in August to tackle the problem, with the aim of generating trial projects to increase the collection, reuse and recycling of solar panel and battery storage systems.

Sophie Vorrath

Sophie is editor of Renew Economy and editor of its sister site, One Step Off The Grid . She is the co-host of the Solar Insiders Podcast. Sophie has been writing about clean energy for more than a decade.

Recent Posts

“Blows your mind:” Regulator says boom in home batteries and PV puts 82 pct renewables within reach

Regulator says surge in home battery and rooftop PV installations puts the 82 pct renewables…

7 May 2026

Australian solar company signs historic deal to help “entire country” quit diesel power

One of Australia's leading commercial solar and energy services companies has signed an historic deal…

7 May 2026

Federal Labor unveils plans for fossil gas reservation to ensure share of production is not exported

One-fifth of all gas exports on the east coast will be set aside for use…

7 May 2026

The spot mirage: Low wholesale prices show the future, but are a poor signal for new wind and solar

Wholesale electricity prices are too low to support either new generation, or even old generation.…

7 May 2026

How mapping of PV “fingerprints” can indicate what the rooftop solar juggernaut will do next

A computer scientist has found a way to accurately forecast what rooftop solar -- the…

7 May 2026

State energy minister says impact of home storage in “baking hot summer” shows grid at turning point

NSW energy minister Penny Sharpe says rise in home storage has created "turning point" for…

7 May 2026