At first glance, solar energy seems like a perfect solution to all our energy needs: sunlight is readily if not abundantly available, it consumes no fuel, gives off no emissions and once it’s set up, it’s cheap to run. However, to reverse the old proverb, every silver lining has its cloud, and solar energy has some disadvantages.
These disadvantages can be summed up briefly:
- aesthetics,
- site suitability and other practical considerations,
- energy required to make the PV panels.
Aesthetics of Solar Panels & Energy
Aesthetics is a very subjective disadvantage of solar energy. Solar panels are best installed on the roofs of houses, and to maintain enough energy for a household, quite a few solar panels are needed to create an adequate solar array. This may not be to everyone’s taste and the panels may spoil the overall look of a house. If birds perch on the solar panels (which they frequently do in certain latitude when the panels are placed at a more upright angle), they will make a mess down the face of the panel, looking ugly and reducing the efficiency of the panel. To keep the panel clean and to make sure it gets enough sunlight, the glass front will need to be cleaned off (clean it like you would a window). However, any aesthetic “disadvantages” of solar energy are minimal and can be overcome. Solar panels are no more or less ugly to look at than other roof-mounted conveniences such as TV aerials or satellite dishes. At certain angles, PV panels look almost identical to skylights.
Site Suitability for Solar Energy Exploitation
Site suitability is one of the more serious disadvantages of solar energy. Not every house is situated where it can get enough sunlight to generate its own energy. This is not so much an issue of latitude – solar electricity and solar water heating systems are used (albeit to a minor extent) in Alaska. However, a home may have the best site for installing solar panels shaded by buildings. However, these homes are few and far between – most homes in Australia have some part of their roof facing the right way to put a solar panel or a solar water heater.
With solar water heaters, the actual heater part needs to be reasonably close to the hot water tank so the water heated by the panel doesn’t cool down on the way. This may make some homes unsuitable.
Some areas, of course, have a very cloudy climate, so homes in these areas may not get enough sunshine to make solar energy a big contributor. However, in most of Australia (and even New Zealand), most places will get enough sunshine.
Solar power obviously does not work at night. This is easily overcome with a deep cycle battery that stores the charge for night-time use.
Energy Used To Make Solar Panels
But the biggest of all disadvantages of solar energy is the energy taken to make them. This is one factor that has deterred many from investing in solar power, particularly mainstream energy providers. However, as people look at dwindling oil supplies and carbon emissions, the technology has improved so that a solar panel will replace the energy taken to make it in about 1.5 years, while the panel itself will last at least 30 years, so the high “energy investment capital” put into making solar panels will pay off.
Related Sites
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- Solar Water Heaters: The Lowdown
- Solar Electricity: How it’s Made, How to Use It
- Brisbane Solar Resources
- Cons of Solar Energy
- Solar Energy For Homes
- Why You Should Consider Installing Solar Pool Heating in Brisbane
- Five Advantages of Solar Energy
- How Solar Power Panels Work

December 4th, 2008 at 7:24 am
Almost makes solar power sound like crap. Who’d use this in their right mind when you have perfectly good wind power?
December 8th, 2008 at 5:55 am
I reckon hey Kerry.
In my opinion, wind power is the superior alternative. I like what Google and major energy innovators are doing with their network power solution. Maybe one day we can all benefit from each other’s energy production capacity.
January 10th, 2009 at 3:01 am
[...] from our previous post about the disadvantages of solar energy, I’d like to point out that solar energy has many advantages. The use of solar energy results [...]
February 1st, 2009 at 10:46 pm
Ultimately I think different technologies are better adapted to different situations. For instance – solar power isn’t feasible where it’s cloudy or at the north poles – wind power would be better suited.
However, if you’re trekking through a wasteland with no winds and you need to charge a phone and you’ll probably find that your solar panels will do a better trick.
May 18th, 2009 at 3:06 am
Well solar energy is not ready to be commercialized fully as yet. They basically need better stores of energy to save it and different technologies to get more out of the sunlight. Till that day comes wind power would remain the dominant free natural power source.
May 22nd, 2009 at 3:48 pm
Would it be reasonable to have a giant field of solar panels, run by a large company or organization? One of the reasons that wind energy works so well, in my opinion, is that companies and universities have started building turbines to help supply power to a number of places at once. Could a large group of solar panels work in the same way, or does this technology work better on the level of the individual home?
August 5th, 2009 at 10:23 am
Many drawbacks that are differant for each household. The lack of sunlight in certain cloudy areas for days at a time would not be a selling point of the system. Battery power also means a change to the lighting systems found in homes. The bigger questions revolve around AC to DC characteristics and the extra hardware that must accompany the solar panels. Some people cant even find the power breaker switch in their present situations.
April 30th, 2010 at 5:35 am
Love opinion. Hope solar system info would help someone reduce energy bills.
September 3rd, 2010 at 6:56 am
I am currenly studying different energies in physics in year 10 at school, and both the author and commentors of this article do not have completly correct answers. Opinions, of course are evident, however solar water heating systems are actually proven to work even in the the areas where there is almost no sunlight. Wind power is not a reliable source of energy, as the turbines only pick up around 20% of the wind that occurs. Also, large areas need to be cleared to allow room for these. Wind power is not a sustainable form of electricity, yet solar power is almost always successful.