The head of the European Space Agency said this week that Europe is exploring the idea of using space-based solar power to become more energy independent and produce fewer greenhouse gas emissions.
“It will be up to Europe, ESA and its Member States to support the technology to solve one of the most pressing problems of this generation,” he tweeted Josef Ashbacher, ESA Director General, an intergovernmental organization that brings together 22 Member States in Europe.
The space agency had previously commissioned studies from consultancy groups based in the UK and Germany. The purpose? Evaluating the costs and benefits of space solar energy development. The results? Just published (I link them to you) for the benefit of all citizens and above all political leaders.
Solaris, the plans are already in place
Not only is it not a joke, but there are already plans: space solar energy, Aschbacher thinks, can be a key to energy decarbonization. The program drawn up by the agency will be presented in November, and if approved could lead to the start of a system as early as 2025, just over two years later.
Possible? In theory (and I stress “theory”), space-based solar power is quite simple. Solar energy can be collected by satellites orbiting well above the Earth's atmosphere. There it is converted into electricity and then transmitted to the ground via microwave, collected by photovoltaic cells or antennas and converted into electricity for residential or industrial use. The main advantage of collecting solar energy from space rather than on the ground is that there are no nights or clouds to hinder the collection.
How much space solar energy would be needed?
ESA reports reflect not only on the technologies, but also on the financing necessary to introduce a space power system into the network. Europe currently consumes around 3.000 TWh of electricity on an annual basis and building (large) structures in geostationary orbit a quarter to a third of that demand could be met. All at the "modest price" of hundreds of billions of euros.
Why so much? Because getting space-based solar power would require a constellation of huge satellites 36.000 km high. How huge? Considered 10 times larger than the ISS (which weighs 450 tons). Add thousands of launches to bring the materials to be assembled into orbit and you will understand where these numbers come from.
“With soon-to-be-expected capabilities, such as those that SpaceX's Starship rocket is expected to enable, getting a single satellite into orbit would take 4 to 6 years,” the report reads. “Providing the number of satellites to meet the maximum contribution that space solar power could make to the energy mix in 2050 requires a 200-fold increase in our current launch capacity.” You said nothing.
I am not surprised that the idea receives criticism
“It's the stupidest thing ever,” he said about her a few years ago Elon Musk, colorful as never before. “If anyone should be interested, it's me, who has a rocket company and a solar company. But it won't work. With a solar panel in orbit you get double the solar energy, but it requires double conversion from photon to electron to photon, back to electron. What is the conversion efficiency? Difficult to reach even 50%. This is why panels are better.”
Do you agree? For the sake of completeness, Musk also sells panels. Or rather: photovoltaic tiles.
The American tycoon is also echoed by physicist Casey Handmer, who in an online analysis described three beautiful weaknesses for space solar energy. Which? Transmission losses, thermal losses and logistic costs.
A cost… space
The ESA reports do not dispel the doubts expressed by critics. The doubts that this solar space technology is not competitive at all remain. If not for convenience, however, perhaps the action will continue out of necessity: will the war in Ukraine and the shortage of Russian natural gas be a spring?
We look forward to November: it would be interesting to see a space agency dealing with a technology that until yesterday was considered only science fiction. Obstacles and timing seem prohibitive, but somehow, in the future, Earth will likely get energy from space. Will it be in this century or the next?