BP Solar

BP Solar was a manufacturer and installer of photovoltaic solar cells headquartered in Madrid, Spain, with production facilities in Frederick, MD, India and China.[1][2] It was a subsidiary of BP.

History

In 1981, BP acquired initially 50% of Lucas Energy Systems which became Lucas BP Solar Systems.[3] The company became wholly owned by BP in the mid-1980s.[4] When BP merged with Amoco in 1998 it acquired Amoco's 50% stake in Solarex.[5] In 1999 it acquired Enron's stake in Solarex and consolidated its PV divisions into a new subsidiary named BP Solarex.[6] In that year the company became the world's leading PV producer.[7] In 2001 the division renamed itself BP Solar.[8]

BP Solar and Indian firm Tata Power established Tata BP Solar, a joint venture company, in 1989.[9] The company began commercial operations in 1991 by establishing its first manufacturing unit with a production capacity of 3 MW in India.[10][9] BP Solar exited the joint venture in 2012, and Tata BP Solar became a wholly owned subsidiary of the Tata Group.[11]

In 2004, the R&D part of BP Solar was sold to the UK's National Renewable Energy Centre (Narec). In 2013, it became Solar Capture Technologies.[12] In 2010, it closed down the factory at Frederick, Maryland.[13] BP Solar closed on 21 December 2011 when BP announced its departure from the solar energy business.[14][15]

Operations

PV power plants using BP solar modules include:

BP Solar had many projects and co-operative activities in developing countries, including supplying power to 36,000 homes in rural Indonesia, installing 1000 solar devices to provide power to 400 remote villages in the Philippines, and setting up a rural electrification scheme in Malaysia to provide power to 30,000 remote homes in Sabah, Sarawak and Peninsular Malaysia.[17] In the mid-1980s BP installed Solar power for Microwave repeater stations across Sierra Leone in support of a telecommunications network restoration.

BP Solar (with the Commonwealth Scientific and Industrial Research Organisation — CSIRO) was also involved in the commercialization of a long-life deep cycle lead acid battery, which is well suited to the storage of electricity for renewable remote area power systems (RAPS). This GreenGel battery, and CSIRO's new battery charging procedures, will reduce capacity loss and premature failure sometimes encountered with existing battery technology. A significant component of the project will be the establishment of an innovative manufacturing process to enable the production of these advanced batteries at an internationally competitive price, facilitating a major export market.[18]

  • Bürstadt, Germany — 5 MW from 30,000 modules
  • Springerville, Arizona, USA — 4.59 MW from 34,980 modules
  • Geiseltalsee, Germany — 4 MW from 25,000 modules
  • Long Island, New York, USA — 32 MW from 164,312 modules[16]

See also

  • Green technology
  • List of photovoltaics companies
  • Photovoltaic array
  • Photovoltaics
  • Photovoltaic power stations
  • Renewable energy
  • Solar power
  • Solar shingle
  • Solar tracker
  • Timeline of solar energy

References

  1. Solar Power Profitability: BP Solar retrieved 2008-08-18^
  2. Hoovers^
  3. BP and Lucas form solar company Electronics and Power, March 1981^
  4. The Long Island Solar Farm US Dept. of Energy, 2013^
  5. BP Solarex Becomes World's Largest PV Manufacturer BuildingGreen, 1 May 1999, retrieved 27 June 2024^
  6. Company news; BP Amoco plans to buy remaining 50% stake in Solarex Dow Jones, 7 April 1999, retrieved 13 March 2019^
  7. Philip Wolfe. The Solar Generation Wiley - IEEE, 2018^
  8. Jeff Shepard. BP Solarex To Become BP Solar EEPower, EETech Group, 1 May 1999, retrieved 27 June 2024^
  9. HISTORY & MILESTONES Tata Power Solar, retrieved 9 March 2017^
  10. Tata Power Solar Is First Indian Company To Ship 1 Gigawatt Of Solar Modules CleanTechnica, March 2017, retrieved 9 March 2017^
  11. Tata BP Solar India Limited renamed as Tata Power Solar Systems Limited – a new beginning for India's pioneering solar company! Tata Power Solar, 31 August 2012, retrieved 27 June 2024^
  12. Solar Capture Technologies launched retrieved 2013-05-07^
  13. Bruce Mulliken. Solarex fades away retrieved 15 March 2013^
  14. Tom Bergin, Sarah Young. BP turns out lights at solar business Reuters, 21 December 2011, retrieved 21 December 2011^
  15. BP to Close Its Solar Business after 40 Years Business Green, retrieved 26 February 2024^
  16. BP invests $220 million in U.S. solar projects Reuters, 2021-06-01, retrieved 2023-06-14^
  17. Tian Liang. Rural Electrification in East Malaysia : Achieving optimal power generation system and sustainability of rural electrification projects 2016^
  18. Renewable Energy Commercialisation Programme^