"New Company Looks to Produce Space Based Solar Power Within a
Decade"
Universe Today
http//www.universetoday.com/2009/02/18/new-company-looks-to-produce-
space-based-solar-power-within-a-decade
Is space-based solar power (SBSP) a technology whose time has
come? The concept and even some of the hardware for harnessing
energy from the sun with orbiting solar arrays has been around
for some time. But the biggest challenge for making the concept
a reality, says entrepreneur Peter Sage of Space Energy, Inc.,
is that SBSP has never been commercially viable. But that could
be changing. Space Energy, Inc. has assembled an impressive team
of scientists, engineers and business people, putting together
what Sage calls "a rock-solid commercial platform" for their
company. And given the current looming issues of growing energy
needs and climate change, Space Energy, Inc. could be in the
right place at the right time.
"Although it's a very grandiose vision, it makes total sense,"
Sage told Universe Today. "This is an inevitable technology;
it's going to happen. If we can put solar panels in space where
the sun shines 24 hours a day, if we have a safe way of
transmitting the energy to Earth and broadcasting it anywhere,
that is a serious game changer." If everything falls into place
for this company, they could be producing commercially available
SBSP within a decade.
The basic concept of SBSP is having solar cells in space
collecting energy from sun, then converting the energy into a
low intensity microwave beam, sending it down to Earth where it
is collected on a rectenna, and then fed into the power grid to
provide electricity. Almost 200 million gigawatts of solar
energy is beamed towards the Earth every second, which is more
energy than our civilization has used since the dawn of the
electrical age. We only need a way to harness that energy and
make it usable.
Space Energy, Inc.'s vision is to help create an
energy-independent world, and improve the lives of millions of
people by bringing a source of safe, clean energy to the planet
from space. They are looking to become the world's leading, and
perhaps the first, SBSP enterprise.
Solar collector beaming energy to Earth. Image courtesy Mafic
Studios.
"The biggest challenge for SBSP is making it work on a
commercial level in terms of bottom line," said Sage, "i.e.,
putting together a business case that would allow the enormous
infrastructure costs to be raised, the plan implemented, and
then electricity sold at a price that is reasonable. I say
'reasonable' and not just 'competitive' because we're getting
into a time where selling energy only on a price basis isn't
going to be the criteria for purchase."
Currently, there are times in the US when electricity is sold
wholesale for close to a dollar a kilowatt during peak usage or
times of emergency when power needs to be shipped around the
national grid. Sage said SBSP will never be cost comparable with
the current going rate of 6 or 7 cents a kilowatt due to the
enormous set-up costs.
"We believe we can get it to a reasonable price, a fair market
price as the demand for energy increases," Sage said.
A huge energy gap is looming for our world, and that too, will
change the energy game.
According to a white paper written by aerospace engineer James
Michael Snead, "The End of Easy Energy and What Are We Going To
Do About It," in order to meet the world's projected increase
in energy needs by 2100 which likely will be at least three
times what is being produced today, today's sustainable energy
production must expand by a factor of over 25. Under that
scenario, even if the US were to build 70 new nuclear plants,
add the equivalent of 15 more Hoover Dams, expand the
geothermal capacity by 50 times what it is today, install over
a million large land or sea wind turbines covering
150,000 square miles, build 60,000 square miles of commercial
solar voltaic farms, and on top of that convert 1.3 billion dry
tons of food mass to bio fuels, still only 30% of the power
needs would be filled by 2100, or perhaps even earlier.
"Looking at every single technology we can as a civilization to
try and fill the energy gap in a clean and resourceful,
sustainable way, technologies like SBSP have to be made to
work," said Sage.
He says this is an important point. "We're not setting ourselves
up to compete with coal, or nuclear, or ground based solar or
wind. I don't want to pick a fight with any of those industries
saying that we're trying to take a piece of their pie. What
we're saying is that right now, from a responsible perspective
in terms of being a good steward for the environment, we need
to look at every single source of energy that we can get our
hands on, primarily green, and develop it regardless, because
we're going to need it. SBSP is one of the few forms of energy
that has the ability to be base-load, i.e., 24-7, and it's the
only form of energy that can be broadcast on demand."
The first phase of Space Energy, Inc.'s plan is to launch a
small prototype satellite into low Earth orbit. "This will help
validate the numbers we are speculating on at this point, but
also validate several different aspects of what SBSP can do,"
said Sage. "From a successful demonstration, we are hoping to
close power purchase agreements with one of several entities we
are in discussions with at present. And on the strength of that
we should be able to put the first commercial satellite in
orbit."
With regards to the timetable, Sage was hesitant to commit to
a schedule. "As timetables go, everything needs to be flexible,
but we are looking to close the financing for the demonstrator
during the first quarter of this year (2009). The demonstrator
is a 24 to 36 month project and, from there, we will start the
commercial build-out of the main satellite, which could take up
to four years to be operational."
That's an aggressive schedule. But Sage said since their plan
is being driven from a commercial basis, they can run their
operation differently than government agencies who don't
necessarily operate with the bottom line in mind. "Our board
members and entrepreneurial group certainly have a lot of
experience running commercial entities. We know what we're
doing. We're in a market that we hope to pioneer, and everyone
feels confident that we have what it takes. We certainly have
the passion, vision and enthusiasm to make this happen."
What are the biggest hurdles to overcome in this project? "If
you would have asked me that question a few months ago," Sage
replied, "I would have said a combination of meeting the right
people who could understand the vision and scope of what it is
what we're doing, and raising the initial financing for the
demonstrator. Those hurdles, at this point, really seem to be
taken care of. The more we have our technical teams talk with
investors, the more people understand that we're real and this
isn't some sort of Star Trek giggle factor. Right now, with the
level of due diligence that's been done not only on SBSP itself,
but with ourselves as a commercially viable entity, we're on
the forefront of many people's agenda in terms of how to move
this forward. We see a straight path to making this a reality."
Sage said no new technology is needed for the demonstrator,
which will be a working, small prototype, but challenges do
remain to move forward beyond that. "Obviously, there are
technical challenges because something of this scale has never
been done before. We know we can do wireless power transmission,
as NASA did some pretty significant tests on this in the 1970s.
We know the physics of wireless power transmission, and how
everything should work from geostationary orbit."
While the demonstrator won't be of any scale where energy could
be sold commercially, it would be a proof of concept.
"Once we've demonstrated that we can wirelessly beam power
accurately to the ground in a safe, controlled, effective
manner, and in a way that can be metered and measured," said
Sage, "we will have taken a massive step forward to prove that
SBSP is a technology of the future that has the potential to
really fill a gap in the world's energy needs."
Some have equated developing SBSP to what was accomplished with
the Apollo program.
"There are so many positive spinoffs to SBSP as a game changing
foundation of space commerce, that just by addressing a lot of
the challenges that lay ahead, we will be blazing a trail for
many other opportunities for a low earth orbit economy," Sage
added.
Space Energy, Inc. recently attended the World Future Energy
Summit and has been overwhelmed with the response.
"We've had discussions with many different entities, both
governmental and private, in the Middle East; Abu Dhabi,
United Arab Emirates, Jordan, Dubai, many areas around Europe,
and many of the world's top investment firms. I don't think
we're going to be short of people that will want to support
us." Sage added that in general, SBSP has strong support in
Washington DC, and that SBSP recently was added to a list of
technologies being studied by the Obama administration.
SBSP has ability to literally change the course of history,
and impact the quality of life for people everywhere. Sage
said this project is an entrepreneurs' dream.
"I speak for our entire team here, we're not just focused on
how much money are we going to make," Sage said. "We're focused
on the fact that this is an inevitable technology and someone
is going to do it. Right now we're the best shot. We're also
focused on the fact that, according to every scenario we've
analyzed, the world needs space based solar power, and it needs
it soon, as well as the up-scaling of just about every other
source of renewable energy that we can get our hands on."
"Space based solar power will happen whether we crack cold
fusion, or whether we suddenly go to 80% efficiency on ground
based solar power (currently its only at 50%)," Sage continued. "It has to happen based on the nature on what it is. With that
in mind, I've been willing to put everything I have on the line
to be able to make this work, and that was three years, ago. To
see how far we've come in the past six to eight months has been
amazing."
"This is going to happen."
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