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Solar panel recycler leads Australia in emerging industry

The Lead South Australia

Australia’s only solar panel recycling company is looking to scale up production as the number of broken and end of life systems mounts.

Adelaide-based Reclaim PV has teamed up with major solar panel manufacturers who distribute in Australia and is refining its processes as well as lobbying for panels to be included in recycling regulations.

The company was started by Clive Fleming and David Galloway in 2014 and was spun out of Solar Maintenance and Renewable Technologies (SMART), which they launched in South Australia in 2011.

“We saw the need for the maintenance of solar. We saw a lot of sales happening but not a lot of after sales stuff, there was a vacant space,” Fleming said.

“From there we saw a demand for recycling – we were removing a lot of modules from roofs and we were left with a big pile of about 600 panels.”

Recycled panels are not recirculated, they are dismantled using a Pyrolysis process developed to remove glues and recover glass, aluminium, solar cells and contacts.

“We’re trying to value add to the cells so they can be reused – not as solar panels  – but in new self powered products,” Fleming said.

Solar panels generally have a 20 or 25-year warranty but a small percentage of the 23 million solar panels installed in Australia are damaged due to installation or transport handling faults, or develop new faults each year.

Galloway and Fleming are working with the a leading Australian research facility to get more value out of the recycled solar cells and streamline the dismantling process.

They conservatively estimate 100,000 to 150,000 panels a year need replacing in Australia.

“It’s not as simple as finding solar panels that are broken and recycling them, there are undiagnosed systems out there and all these solar installation companies are now turning to servicing and that’s bringing in more diagnoses,” Fleming said.

“It’s going to be steady for the next 15 years and then it’s going to ramp up into the millions every year needing to come off the roofs.”

“I think because it’s PV, people want to recycle anyway – people who buy solar panels are generally concerned about the environment.”

The Waste Electrical and Electronic Equipment (WEEE) directive regulates the treatment of electrical and electronic waste at the end of its life cycle in Europe. Solar panels were added to the directive in 2012.

“PV Recycling in Europe have been recycling for seven or eight years so they’ve brought that awareness to these manufacturers who are operating in Australia as well as Europe,” Fleming said.

Australian CleanTech Managing Director John O’Brien said official protocols around the recycling of PV solar panels would become increasingly important in the coming years as millions of panels came to the end of their useful life.

“There’s a great business opportunity there if government signals that in good time,” he said.

“The big providers will need a local smart company to go and pick them up, process them and do good things with them so certainly it’s going to be huge.”

A report released in June predicts solar panel waste could total 78 million tonnes globally by 2050.

The Australian Government’s National Television and Computer Recycling Scheme was established in 2011 to provide householders and small businesses with access to industry-funded collection and recycling services for televisions and computers.

The regulations require importers and manufacturers of televisions, computers and computer products to fund and implement recycling of their products.

Galloway said including solar panels in the regulations would be a great benefit.

“We are looking for industry and government support at this point to reach a critical mass so the feedstock is enough to offset the costs,” he said.

“It’s a new industry in Australia, the manufacturers see it as a cost, which it is, so we’ve got to work in with that. We’ve got to give them a value added service, which is why SMART is associated with it.

“We’re also working with each state government to try and get infrastructure in each state so they can change the e-waste legislation to make it illegal to send PV panels to landfill.”

Reclaim PV is refining its processes and hopes to establish collection and dismantling centres across Australia before the end of the year.

The company will also continue to work with Tier One panel suppliers such as SunPower, Canadian Solar, Suntech, ReneSola and Yingli, with more manufacturers partnering soon.

“It’s industry led at the moment, they know the problems and they know where it’s headed. It’s just a matter of getting it to the point where it can be facilitated on all fronts,” Galloway said.

“We are setting up an industry stewardship, which will then hopefully lead in to a program that’s run by the government and also the legislative changes need to be made in each state as well.

“We’re trying to set it up now so there’s an easy gradient into it so that when it becomes a big problem the infrastructure is there.

“If we don’t and it escalates and we have to look to catch up to a waste problem, which came out of a good green carbon offsetting initiative.”

South Australia leads the nation in the uptake of wind energy and rooftop solar with renewable sources accounting for more than 30 per cent of the electricity generated in the state.

Source: The Lead South Australia. Reproduced with permission.

Comments

8 responses to “Solar panel recycler leads Australia in emerging industry”

  1. Kay Schieren Avatar

    I have a 40w panel which was made in the early 80s and still puts out 19V. It charges small gel batteries and it thus powers water transfer pumps and battery drills, etc. The reliability of a quality panel is amazing. The important thing is to keep them clean and not allow major shock. I have all my panels accessible from the ground for easy cleaning and other maintenance. I expect my panels to last at least forty years with regular maintenance if they are good quality to start off with. I hope the recycling regulations do not bring about low quality products as a cynical reaction to income-generation opportunities under the law. This happens so often when the government legislates one aspect of industry without caring about the big picture. e.g. the thousands of useless “free” satellite internet installations which in my own instance I had to replace with my own wireless remote access point because of hopeless upload speeds and high cost of data which only lived up to the promised download speed at 3am in the morning.

  2. neroden Avatar
    neroden

    It’s good to recycle the damaged panels. But it seems ridiculous to recycle panels which could be reinstalled elsewhere. Out in the wide-open rural areas with lots of space, panel efficiency doesn’t matter much and it seems insane to destroy a working panel.

  3. Chris Fraser Avatar
    Chris Fraser

    Good luck with the project. Perhaps it’s not possible now, but I’d like to see old materials somehow get into high efficiency PV product in the future. Especially if low EROEI compared with new materials.

  4. Tim Buckley Avatar
    Tim Buckley

    Great project, exactly what we need government for – to promote and encourage a best practice approach for a new industry so the industry deals with the issue on a collective and efficient basis. Instead our government will ignore their role and spend our tax dollars promoting ever more coal export infrastructure.

  5. Bruce Tucker Avatar
    Bruce Tucker

    great idea !, I work for a solar panel wholesaler, and they have a lot of , warranty returned panels, taking up space in the warehouse, last year I had to remove the aluminium frames, and sell those to a scrap metal dealer, but the glass ( broken) and the cells were just dumped in the bin most probably ending up as land-fill

  6. Graeme Rose Avatar

    Nice to see a recycling company thinking about the future and not the past. Solar panel recycling is clearly going to be a huge industry and innovators like this will no doubt be the ones prospering.

  7. yarpos . Avatar
    yarpos .

    A year down the track Reclaim PV = 404 not found

    We need a committed plan to properly recycle the toxic elements within solar panels.

    1. Gordon Bossley Avatar
      Gordon Bossley

      http://reclaimpv.com/#about works as at May ’18.

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