The sun provides an abundant source of clean, renewable energy. This can be converted into electricity using solar photovoltaic panels, known as ‘solar PV’, installed on your roof. This electricity can power your home, save you money, and help to decarbonise grid supplied electricity.
used in a home. Here are some quick definitions to help you. Solar photovoltaic (PV) systems are made up of several panels. Each panel has many cell made from layers of semi-conducting material, usually silicon. hen light shines on material, it creates a flow of electricity. Solar panels don’t need direct sunlight and can work on cloudy d
Installing solar panels lets you use free, renewable, clean electricity to power your appliances. You can sell extra electricity to the grid or store it for later use. There are over 1.3 million installations on homes across the UK – see where the UK solar panel hotspots are.
Very few found that their solar panels could provide all of their electricity needs. But a quarter of those surveyed told us their panels generated between half and three quarters of their annual electricity. The rest they would get from elsewhere – usually mains grid electricity.
Solar electricity is a clean, renewable energy source. A typical home solar panel system could save around one tonne of carbon per year, depending on where you live in the UK. That’s the equivalent of driving 3,600 miles, or from London to Bristol 30 times. Export the electricity you can’t use yourself and get paid for it.
We can sometimes use the sun’s energy directly, like when we design homes to take advantage of passive solar heat. But when we want to use it for technology, we need ways to convert the sun’s raw output into mechanical, thermal or electrical energy. Solar panels offer one way to do this.