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Wanted: cheap solution for using sun as power source

Solar power may be the technology of the future, but for many people it's still prohibitively expensive. Has anyone heard of - or even better is anyone using - any alternative and low cost ways of harnesing the sun's energy?

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I've posted a blog about a farmer in China with an innovative solution using glass bottles. I'd welcome suggestions from people of any others they know, or more information about this story if they have any. Cheers, Jeremy

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The Centre for Alternative Technology (CAT) in North Wales have demonstrated some lovely, simply technologies - like coiling black pipe on your roof. But you DO need lots of sun. Hmmm. Not so good for those of us in the UK. Works really well for one of our partners in Swaziland. Problem is, in winter the water's freezing, and in the summer, when you want a cold shower after a hot day on site, it's far too warm.

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Solar hot water and growing biomass (for whatever purpose). Solar for electricity is not very efficient even with the best modern PV cells. Solar hot water will even work in northern Europe as far as northern Scotland.

Also - best to build buildings to harness the sun to cool..... ie the Passive Haus - i'll try and find a link

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I've seen someone in the bush in South Africa make a very basic shower simply by tying a large black dustbin/garbage bag filled with water to a tree branch.

He left it in the sun all day and returned in the evening when the water had been heated by the sun, made a couple of holes in the bag and had a rinse in the resulting trickles of hot water!

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Teenager invents £23 solar panel that could be solution to developing world's energy needs ... made from human hair

By Daily Mail Reporter
10th September 2009
http://www.dailymail.co.uk/sciencetech/article-1212005/Teenager-inv...

A new type of solar panel using human hair could provide the world with cheap, green electricity, believes its teenage inventor.

Milan Karki, 18, who comes from a village in rural Nepal, believes he has found the solution to the developing world's energy needs.

The young inventor says hair is easy to use as a conductor in solar panels and could revolutionise renewable energy.

'First I wanted to provide electricity for my home, then my village. Now I am thinking for the whole world,' said Milan, who attends school in the capital, Kathmandu.

The hair replaces silicon, a pricey component typically used in solar panels, and means the panels can be produced at a low cost for those with no access to power, he explained.

In Nepal, one of the poorest countries in the world, many rural areas lack access to electricity and even in areas connected to power lines, users face shortages of up to 16 hours a day.

Milan and four classmates initially made the solar panel as an experiment but the teens are convinced it has wide applicability and commercial viability.

'I'm trying to produce commercially and distribute to the districts. We've already sent a couple out to the districts to test for feasibility,' he said.

The solar panel, which produces 9 V (18 W) of energy, costs around £23 to make from raw materials.

But if they were mass-produced, Milan says they could be sold for less than half that price, which could make them a quarter of the price of those already on the market.

Melanin, a pigment that gives hair its colour, is light sensitive and also acts as a type of conductor. Because hair is far cheaper than silicon the appliance is less costly.
solar panel

The solar panel can charge a mobile phone or a pack of batteries capable of providing light all evening.

Milan began his quest to create electricity when he was a boy living in Khotang, a remote district of Nepal completely unconnected to electricity. According to him, villagers were skeptical of his invention at first.

'They believe in superstitions, they don't believe in science. But now they believe,' he said.
Milan Karki

He first tried to use water currents hydro power on a small scale, but said the experiment became too expensive.

'I searched for new, other renewable, affordable sources. People in these places are living the life of the stone age even in the 21st century,' he said.

Milan, whose hero is the inventor Thomas Eddison, describes himself as lucky because his family could afford for him to receive a proper education while many other villagers are forced to work from an early age. Most of those from his village are illiterate.

He was originally inspired after reading a book by physicist Stephen Hawking, which discussed ways of creating static energy from hair.
Milan Karki

'I realised that Melanin was one of the factors in conversion of energy,' he said.

Half a kilo of hair can be bought for only 16p in Nepal and lasts a few months, whereas a pack of batteries would cost 50p and last a few nights.

People can replace the hair easily themselves, says Milan, meaning his solar panels need little servicing.

Three years after first coming up with the idea, Milan says the idea is more important than ever because of the crucial need for renewable energies in the face of finite power sources and global warming.

'Slowly, natural resources are degrading so it is necessary to think about the future," he said.

'One day we will be in a great crisis regarding this fuel so it is a good thing to do today.

'This is an easy solution for the crisis we are having today. We have begun the long walk to save the planet.'

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