Phil Timmons
Platinum Member
- Joined
- Mar 18, 2008
- Messages
- 659
Face it people are not good at cleaning up after themselves in all endeavors.
As for salvage value, depends on labor and transportation costs. I know it costs me most of the value to transport per ton with free labor.
Out here in the boonies most want to charge you to pick up a junk car or other steel recycle.
Is there profit in it or would a company just break even if they paid a living wage for labor?
Will be cheaper to rebuild/replace an older site or start over in a clean fresh location?
I don't have the answers but I do know something newer and "better" will come......
Recycling is a lot like gold mining. The return has to exceed the input. 20 years ago much of the currently mined ground was not feasible to mine but once the prices went up enough it is worth the effort to mine the stuff left behind previously.
I live in Lead country and the price of lead dictated how much mining is actively done....
Only government works to loose money
There are some weird Tax and Tariff code details I cannot go into here that make the Solar PV Salvage valuable, as well.
And the look-ahead on labor is heading towards zero. The robotic everything world. If I were assigned the task, I would probably just use a small group of crawlers and ground mobile robotics picking the old clean. Like ants at a picnic. Because the whole site(s) are put together under standard products and methods, they tend to lend themselves well to automation.
As we have noted before -- Predicting the Future is easy. Predicting it correctly is impossible.
Thing that gives Silicon Solar PV a recycling market is more future Solar PV. Same as EV batteries. If that shifts -- who knows? So far it looks like replacing an existing site (with all the Grid connections and framing in place) will be massively cheaper than new, but in practice - that is decades ahead.