4.7 Article

Energy payback and life-cycle CO2 emissions of the BOS in an optimized 3.5 MW PV installation

Journal

PROGRESS IN PHOTOVOLTAICS
Volume 14, Issue 2, Pages 179-190

Publisher

JOHN WILEY & SONS LTD
DOI: 10.1002/pip.652

Keywords

PV plant; balance of system; life-cycle assessment; energy payback; greenhouse gas emissions

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This study is a life-cycle analysis of the balance of system (BOS) components of the 3.5 MWP multi-crystalline PV installation at Tucson Electric Power's (TEP) Springerville, AZ field PV plant. TEP instituted all innovative PV installation program guided by design optimization and cost minimization. The advanced design of the PV structure incorporated the weight of the PV modules as all element of support design, thereby eliminating the need for concrete foundations. The estimate of the life-cycle energy requirements embodied in the BOS is 542 MJ/m(2), a 71% reduction front those of all older central plant; the corresponding life-cycle greenhouse gas emissions are 29 kg CO2 eq./m(2). From field measurements, the energy payback time (EPT) of the BOS is 0.21 years for the actual location of this plant, and 0.37 years for average US insolation/temperature conditions. This is a great improvement from the EPT of about 1.3 years, estimated for all older central plant. The total cost of the balance of system components was $940 US per kW(P) of installed PV, all other milestone in improvement. These results were verified with data from different databases and further tested with sensitivity- and data-uncertainty analyses. Copyright (c) 2005 John Wiley & Sons, Ltd.

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