
-
Pakistan ride luck to reach 177-3 in second South Africa Test
-
Dembele set for PSG return after six weeks out
-
US envoys in Israel to shore up Gaza plan
-
Cargo plane skids off Hong Kong runway, kills 2
-
Amazon's cloud services hit by global outage
-
China posts lacklustre Q3 economic data as key Beijing conclave starts
-
'People can breathe': hope for peace on Afghan-Pakistan border
-
Louvre closes for second day as France hunts jewel thieves
-
Japan coalition deal paves way for Takaichi to be first woman PM
-
England hammer New Zealand after Brook and Salt onslaught
-
Five things to know about Gaza's Rafah border crossing
-
Thyssenkrupp spins off warship unit to tap defence boom
-
Sweden names ex-Chelsea manager Graham Potter new coach
-
Kering shares jump on sale of beauty division to L'Oreal
-
10 South Koreans arrested, two rescued in Cambodia scam crackdown
-
Stock markets bounce back as China-US trade fears ease
-
Pakistan 95-1 at lunch in second South Africa Test
-
Bolivia's new president faces worst economic crisis in decades
-
Serious, popular, besties with Trump: Italy's Meloni marks three years
-
In the Sahel, no reprieve under jihadist blockade
-
One year on, Spain's flood survivors rebuild and remember
-
Cargo plane skids off Hong Kong runway, kills two
-
Myanmar junta says seized 30 Starlink receivers in scam centre raid
-
Japan set for new coalition and first woman PM
-
Toxic haze chokes Indian capital
-
Flood reckoning for Bali on overdevelopment, waste
-
China's economic growth slows amid sputtering domestic demand
-
Atletico aim to convince Alvarez they belong among elite on Arsenal visit
-
Rebuilding Leverkusen wary of world's best PSG
-
French police hunt Louvre jewel thieves
-
Blue Jays down Mariners to force game seven decider in MLB playoff series
-
Asian markets bounce back as China-US trade fears ease
-
California's oil capital hopes for a renaissance under Trump
-
OpenAI big chip orders dwarf its revenues -- for now
-
Phony AI content stealing fan attention during baseball playoffs
-
Haaland, Kane and Mbappe battle to be Europe's best
-
Verstappen makes clear he is gunning for a fifth world title
-
'Capitalism for all': Rodrigo Paz, Bolivia's ideology-shy president-elect
-
Bolivia elects center-right president, ending two decades of socialism
-
Torq Announces That Gold Fields Has Elected to Proceed to Stage 2 of Santa Cecilia Project Option USD$11 Million Drilling Program to Start at Santa Cecilia
-
Investar Holding Corporation Announces 2025 Third Quarter Results and Wichita Falls Bancshares, Inc. Transaction Update
-
Zedge To Report Fourth Quarter & End of Fiscal Year 2025 Results
-
Eagle Plains Announces Agreement with Kodiak for the Ketch and Portland Properties, Nicola District, BC
-
FIFA 2026 Host City Monterrey Renews with SEVN as Exclusive Media Rights Partner for Legends Match on January 17, 2026
-
Tocvan Advances Drilling, Trenching, and Pilot Mine Preparation, Mobilizing Equipment to North and South Blocks at Gran Pilar Gold-Silver Project
-
Genflow Biosciences PLC Announces Recognition of Patentability of Claims
-
Ex-Buccaneers running back Martin dies at 36
-
NFL Eagles soar over Vikings while Colts improve to 6-1
-
Bolivians look right for a new president, ending two decades of socialism
-
Frustrated Piastri calls for calm review

'Urban mining' offers green solution to old solar panels
As the world pivots from planet-warming fossil fuels to renewable energy, a new pollution problem is rearing its head: What to do with old or worn-out solar panels?
Thousands of photovoltaic slabs are being installed across the United States every day, particularly in the sunny west and south of the country, as states like California race to towards greener energy production.
But with an expected lifespan of around 30 years, the first wave of solar installations is now coming to the end of its usefulness, sparking a rush to recycle things that might otherwise end up in the landfill.
"What is about to happen is a tsunami of solar panels coming back into the supply chain," said Adam Saghei, chief executive of Arizona-based We Recycle Solar.
"One of the challenges with any industry is, there hasn't been that much planning for a circular economy.
"(Solar) is a sustainable form of energy; there needs to be a plan for the retirement of those assets."
Saghei's plan involves, among other things, reusing panels.
Anywhere up to five percent of panels either have a minor production defect or get damaged during transport or installation.
These still-working panels can be refurbished and diverted to other markets, often abroad, Saghei says.
But for the panels that no longer function -- either because they're decrepit, or because they were damaged beyond use during installation, or smashed by hailstones -- there's treasure to be found.
"We're doing what's called urban mining," says Saghei, refering to a process that took his engineers three years to perfect.
That mining recovers silver, copper, aluminium, glass and silicone -- all commodities that have a value on the open market.
While the uses for the metals might be obvious, what to do with silicone and glass is less so, but nonetheles intriguing.
"You can use it for sand traps on golf courses, you can refine it for sandblast mix, you can also use it for the stones or the glass mix that you get for outdoor fireplaces," says Saghei.
With capacity to process up to 7,500 panels every day at the plant in Yuma, a surprisingly small amount goes to waste.
"Depending on the make and model of the panels... we're able to get up to 99 percent recovery rate."
- Logistics -
For Meng Tao, who specialises in sustainable energy infrastructure at Arizona State University, developing an efficient lifecycle for solar panels is a pressing issue.
With the United States among countries committed to weaning itself off fossil fuels following a landmark COP28 climate agreement, solar panel installation looks set to increase to a peak two decades from now.
"Once it matures, then the annual installation and the decommissioning will be about the same," he told AFP.
"But for the next 20 years... at least for the next 10 years... we'll just have more instalations than retirements."
The problem with recycling, he says, is not just that the value of recovered materials from panels can be relatively low, but also the logistics.
With panels distributed to thousands of sometimes far-flung rooftops, it can cost a lot of money just to get them to a recycling center.
And unlike some jurisdictions, the United States imposes the cost of removal and recycling on the end user -- making it more attractive for households just to dump their old units at the local landfill.
"There has to be some policy support" to plug the gap between what consumers will pay and the total lifecycle cost of the panels, says Tao.
- Growing market -
For Saghei, as for any business leaders, profitablity is important.
"You don't see too many getting into the business because recycling has a cost. It's not free. It's labor intensive. It's energy intensive," he says.
But he does see a way forward.
Recovering materials from old solar panels that can be put back into new solar panels is -- he is convinced -- a winning proposition.
"These are markets that are growing," he says.
"Right through this process we are able, once the industry scales to even larger figures, to put those raw commodities back into the supply chain.
"What's exciting is we're at the forefront."
S.Gregor--AMWN