 At the peak of the SunShot Grand Challenge Summit, an all-star lineup of speakers kicked off the third day, jam-packed with discussions and idea-generating activities to help solve some of the toughest problems in solar energy. SunShot Initiative director Minh Le anchored the morning session by highlighting the industry’s progress, in only three years, toward the SunShot 2020 affordability goal. He called on the audience – business leaders, researchers, academics, and entrepreneurs – to “develop innovative approaches to help achieve the final 40% to cost competitive solar in the U.S."  Government leaders, from congressional policymakers to energy experts from the Administration, delivered inspiring and thought-provoking remarks to a packed, attentive house of Summit attendees. Here are a few highlights of the morning plenary: • Dr. Cheryl Martin, ARPA-E: “We are charged to think boldly and differently about the community of innovators… to bring technologies to reality, and ultimately transform our energy future.” • Dr. Dan Arvizu, National Renewable Energy Laboratory: “Globally, solar energy is outpacing wind energy. Solar’s time has arrived.” • Ali Zaidi, White House Domestic Policy Council: “If moonshot was a race away from our planet, SunShot, in a way, is a race to save our planet.” • Cristin Dorgelo, White House Office of Science and Technology Policy: “SunShot Catalyst invests in people… these 21st century ‘moonshots’ target audacious and achievable goals that will create the jobs and products of the future.”
View the Summit Summit day two and day three albums. Adding to the day’s excitement, the Energy Department made two announcements to drive down solar energy costs. To reduce solar soft costs, the SunShot Catalyst prize challenge will leverage the reach and power of online crowdsourcing to generate ideas, spur business innovations, and develop prototypes that address near-term challenges in the U.S. solar marketplace. This new prize aims to tackle market barriers and address technical problems that can be solved through automation, algorithms, data, and software. The Department also announced $10 million for six new R&D projects that will advance groundbreaking concentrating solar power (CSP) technologies. The projects will develop thermochemical energy storage systems to enable more efficient storage of solar energy while using less storage material, cutting the cost for utility-scale CSP electricity generation in the U.S. Building on the momentum, Summit attendees shuffled between 16 grand challenge breakout sessions in the afternoon to drill down on a wide range of important solar energy issues—from solar soft costs, to challenges and opportunities in CSP, to creative business models that will help the solar market thrive without incentives. Follow the solar industry buzz on #SunShotSummit. |
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