When procuring just about anything, it makes sense to get as close to the source as possible. That's the idea behind an ambitious plan to harvest solar energy from outer space, then beam the electricity back to Earth.
Ground-based solar arrays, which are affected by cloudy weather and the night-day cycle, typically produce at about 25 percent of capacity A space-based solar installation on a satellite, however, may have a capacity of 97 percent, according to an MSNBC article.
Pacific Gas & Electric, based in San Francisco, is seeking state regulatory approval to purchase power over a 15-year period from Solaren Corp., Manhattan Beach, Calif. Solaren hopes to begin generating electricity from its solar satellite by 2016, if it can clear technological and regulatory hurdles.
Here's how it would work:
PG&E is not making any investment in Solaren's project, nor would it be the sole client, according to the article. PG&E has signed an agreement to buy the electricity at an unspecified rate that is comparable to that from other renewable energy sources.
Solaren chief executive officer Gary Spirnak participated in a Q&A on PG&E's Next100 blog, where he said, "While a system of this scale and exact configuration has not been built, the underlying technology is very mature and is based on communications satellite technology. For over 45 years, satellites have collected solar energy in earth orbit via solar cells, and converted it to radio frequency (RF) energy for transmissions to earth receive stations. This is the same energy conversion process Solaren uses for its ... plant."
Spirnak said this method is "fundamentally different from terrestrial solar in that we address baseload power not peaking power."
PG&E first revealed its plans April 13 on its blog.