We will follow up on this story on the radio side as well.:
..."The
Associated Press compiled a list of 41 solar makers in the state, which
included the top companies based on market data, and startups. In response to
an AP records request, the California Department of Toxic Substances Control
provided data that showed 17 of them reported waste, while the remaining did
not.
The
same level of federal data does not exist.
The
state records show the 17 companies, which had 44 manufacturing facilities in California , produced
46.5 million pounds of sludge and contaminated water from 2007 through the
first half of 2011. Roughly 97 percent of it was taken to hazardous waste
facilities throughout the state, but more than 1.4 million pounds were
transported to nine other states: Arkansas , Minnesota , Nebraska , Rhode Island , Nevada , Washington , Utah , New Mexico and Arizona .
Several
solar energy experts said they have not
calculated the industry's total waste and were surprised at what the records
showed.
Solyndra,
the now-defunct solar company that received $535 million in guaranteed federal
loans, reported producing about 12.5 million pounds of hazardous waste, much of
it carcinogenic cadmium-contaminated water, which was sent to waste facilities
from 2007 through mid-2011.
Before
the company went bankrupt, leading to increased scrutiny of the solar industry and political fallout for President
Barack Obama's administration, Solyndra said it created 100 megawatts-worth of
solar panels, enough to power 100,000 homes.
The
records also show several other Silicon Valley
solar facilities created millions of pounds of toxic waste without selling a
single solar panel, while they were developing their technology or fine-tuning
their production.
While
much of the waste produced is considered toxic, there was no evidence it has
harmed human health.
The
vast majority of solar companies that generated hazardous waste in California have not been
cited for waste-related pollution violations, although three had minor
violations on file.
In
many cases, a toxic sludge is created when metals and other toxins are removed
from water used in the manufacturing process. If a company doesn't have its own
treatment equipment, then it will send contaminated water to be stored at an
approved dump.
According
to scientists who conduct so-called "life cycle analysis" for solar,
the transport of waste is not currently being factored into the carbon
footprint score, which measures the amount of greenhouse gases produced when
making a product.
Life
cycle analysts add up all the global warming pollution that goes into making a
certain product — from the mining needed for components to the exhaust from
diesel trucks used to transport waste and materials. Not factoring the
hazardous waste transport into solar's carbon footprint is an obvious
oversight, analysts said.
"The
greenhouse gas emissions associated with transporting this waste is not
insignificant," Mulvaney said.
Mulvaney
noted that shipping, for example, 6.2 million pounds of waste by heavy-duty
tractor-trailer from Fremont , Calif. ,
in the San Francisco
Bay area, to a site 1,800
miles away could add 5 percent to a particular product's carbon footprint.
Such
scores are important because they provide transparency to government and
consumers into just how environmentally sustainable specific products are and
lay out a choice between one company's technology and another's.
The
roughly 20-year life of a solar panel still
makes it some of the cleanest energy technology currently available. Producing
solar is still significantly cleaner than fossil fuels. Energy derived from
natural gas and coal-fired power plants, for example, creates more than 10
times more hazardous waste than the same
energy created by a solar panel, according to Mulvaney.
The
U.S.
solar industry said it is reporting its waste, and sending it to approved
storage facilities — thus keeping it out of the nation's air and water. A
coal-fired power plant, in contrast, sends mercury, cadmium and other toxins
directly into the air, which pollutes water and land around the facility.
"Having
this stuff go to ... hazardous waste sites, that's what you want to have
happen," said Adam Browning, executive director of the Vote Solar
Initiative, a solar advocacy group.
Environmental
advocates say the solar industry needs greater transparency, which is getting
more complicated as manufacturing moves from the U.S.
and Europe to less regulated places such as China
and Malaysia
.
The
Silicon Valley Toxics Coalition, a watchdog group created in 1982 in response
to severe environmental problems associated with the valley's electronics
industry, is now trying to keep the solar industry from making similar mistakes
through a voluntary waste reporting "scorecard." So far, only 14 of
114 companies contacted have replied. Those 14 were larger firms that comprised
51-percent of the solar market share.
"We
find the overall industry response rate to our request for environmental
information to be pretty dismal for an industry that is considered
'green,'" the group's executive director, Sheila Davis, said in an email.
While
there are no specific industry standards, Smirnow, head of the solar industry
association, is spearheading a voluntary program of environmental
responsibility. So far, only seven of the group's nearly 81 manufacturers have
signed the pledge.
"We
want (our program) to be more demanding, but this is a young industry and right
now manufacturing companies are focused on survival," he said."
___
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