Solar energy-collecting fabric products can impact energy use—and make businesses in the industry successful.
By Todd Dalland
Coal and oil have superbly fueled and helped enable the extraordinary growth of modern civilization. Their supply is reaching its peak, though, and will soon start to decline—while our population continues to grow and its energy needs increase. The cumulative side effects of coal and oil use over time have significantly impacted our environment and health. For reasons like these, many new companies—Pvilion Inc., New York City, N.Y., being one of them—have formed to help develop and apply solar energy technology to maintain and improve a high standard of living for future generations.
Why it can work
Energy captured from sunlight falling on the earth could satisfy the world’s energy needs, so it is realistic to say that solar energy made affordable will follow coal and oil as the next big fuel.
Because of the vastness of this booming industry many businesses that get into solar energy could make staggering sums of money. U.S. solar deployment has been roughly doubling every year for the past five years, according to Amory Lovins, chief scientist and co-founder of the Rocky Mountain Institute.
Companies that make fabric-based products have a unique opportunity to enter the solar energy business because lightweight, flexible fabric material is an ideal vehicle for solar panels. Who will develop the first flexible photovoltaic (PV) solar fabric product that absolutely captures national and international market interest and goes viral? Which specialty fabrics companies will be the first solar fabric industry billionaires?
Solar can be beautiful
Pvilion’s principals have been part of the flexible PV fabric product business for 10 years and have been involved with several flexible PV solar cell makers and the first applications of their technology into products. The company’s flexible PV technology is meeting the needs of the converging solar and construction industries: making solar installations beautiful and making beautiful buildings become “solar.”
Pvilion’s first major project was the “Solar Sail,” a two-car, solar, electric vehicle-charging station in a suburb of Austin, Texas, that Pvilion designed, built and installed. The “Solar Sail” is an eye-catching and attractive, clean energy landmark, prominently placed to help promote the Pflugerville Community Development Corporation’s dedication to sustainability and its interest in attracting “green” companies to move there. Pvilion has continued working with this city, with contracts to supply PV-powered solar LED street lights on its main thoroughfare and PV solar curtains in its new offices.
A recent project is for the new U.S. Embassy in London, England. Pvilion is providing technology, prototyping, manufacturing and installation for the 600 modular solar arrays that are part of the outer curtain wall for the south, east and west façades of the embassy. Designed by KieranTimberlake, it will be the first building of its kind where three of the building’s facades are shaded with tensile structures and solar arrays, turning a “glass cube” into something more efficient and beautiful—and something visionary.
New products and projects in development will use flexible PV fabric panels for clearspan rental tents; PV fabric strap-on accessories for clearspan, frame and pole-support rental tents; and a new airbeam-supported clearspan tent for gala events on the roof terrace at Carnegie Hall in New York City, N.Y. Many other applications and special projects are certainly possible with this technology.
Making it happen
Government funding for permanent, grid-tied solar panel installations can cover one-third to one-half of installed costs for typical, rigid solar panels, which is why they are selling as well as they are. This government support is a necessary part of transitioning to renewable energy, until scaling up brings production costs down.
Currently, there are no such government subsidies and rebates available for temporary solar panel installations—but there should be. An effort to secure government support for temporary solar panel installations—whether they are tied to a grid or not—would be worthwhile, and I think appropriate. Solar panels on specialty fabric products provide the same renewable energy, just in a different format. This would greatly accelerate the development of flexible PV fabric products.
There is a common perception that geography can make a place unsuitable for solar technology use, but most of the world’s solar panels are currently installed in a moderate-intensity solar environment. The solar-rich areas of the world would, logically, have the biggest sales, and fewer of them are needed in a high-intensity solar environment. But the sun is everywhere and solar panels can be everywhere, too.