• Skip to primary navigation
  • Skip to main content
  • Skip to primary sidebar
  • Skip to footer
One Step Off The Grid

One Step Off The Grid

Solar, storage and distributed energy news

  • Solar
  • Battery/Storage
  • Off-Grid
  • Efficiency
  • Software
  • Podcasts
  • Tariffs
  • Electric Vehicles
  • Electrification

Cutting edge tech to process end-of-life solar panels comes to Australia

May 19, 2022 by Kate Healey Leave a Comment

Image: Dr Nick Engerer

At RE-Alliance we are often asked about end-of-life practices for solar PV panels.

This week we can share some good news we learnt last week at the Clean Energy Council’s Large-Scale Solar Forum. We were particularly impressed by a presentation from Rob Gell, a Director from Solar Recovery Corporation (SRC).

SRC is an Australian-owned company partnering with a European company, LME, who manufacture clean technology specifically built to process end-of-life solar PV panels. In Europe, they have a 12-year history with a 99+% material recovery rate.

This is not recycling. It’s material recovery. It’s about diverting end-of-life solar PV panels from landfill streams and recovering the materials.

This has the potential to be a world-leading example as many countries move towards a more circular economy, reducing the need for future resource extraction by recovering materials from would-be waste.

It will create local jobs in a new industry and deliver positive sustainable outcomes for our environment and human health.

SRC recovers material from end-of-life solar panels by separating panels into parts. The process does not use pyrolysis, chemicals, crushing or thermal processes to recover materials.

The SRC technology uses a combination of mechanical, electrical and vacuum processes to recover materials from PV panels.

The PV material recovery technology can process 180,000 panels per annum, representing over 3,500 metric tonnes of valuable resources, which are returned to manufacturing streams, reducing the need for mining these materials in Australia.

Materials recovered include: aluminium, copper, glass, plastic and silicon.

SRC’s end-of-life solar panel management policy is compliant with the European Union’s Waste from Electrical and Electronic Equipment (WEEE) Directive for the transport, storage, handling and processing of end-of-life solar panels. It also aligns with the Victorian government’s waste management policy on e-waste.

With the scale of roll-out of solar PV envisaged in the Australian Energy Market Operator’s (AEMO’s) Draft 2022 Integrated System Plan, there needs to be an end-of-life process for solar PV panels in place.

Facilities in Biloela and Townsville in Queensland are now accepting decommissioned panels. SRC will establish materials recovery technology in coming months at both locations.

Additionally, solar panel collection centres will be established in south east Queensland, New South Wales and Victoria in coming weeks, with the same model approach being used as has been implemented and refined in Townsville and Biloela.

The first processing machine is expected to arrive in June-July 2022. The first plant site for materials recovery will be in Queensland, with a national roll-out planned by the end of 2024.

The clean technology recovers 99+% from all panel types including Cadmium TE thin film panels. End-of-life compliant management and process fees are as per below:

Achieving a circular economy for solar in Australia will not be without its challenges.

Capturing all end-of-life solar panels from the landfill stream is a huge task and requires many stakeholders to be on board with this system. It will require a change of values whereby decommissioned panels are seen as a resource rather than a waste.

To support circular economy practices like this we can educate others and support circular economy initiatives, including material recovery; ban end-of-life solar panels from landfills under local government control; and use drop off and collection points for end-of-life solar panels.

SRC is accepting decommissioned solar panels now. The first processing plant will be operational in Queensland in the next few months.

Kate Healey is policy manager at RE-Alliance. This article was originally published by RE-Alliance. Reproduced here with permission

Filed Under: Solar, News

Primary Sidebar

Sign up for our weekly newsletter

Emissions Counter

Renew Economy

RSS Energy News from Renew Economy

  • Game on: How major sporting events boost private jet travel, and transport emissions
  • Renewables head off grid, but wind farms last longer than many mines, and that’s a problem
  • No more “bragawatts:” Some investors not convinced that bigger is better for wind projects
  • Struggling wind projects warned their unused capacity will be returned to future CIS tenders
  • Why electricity networks need to understand people, not just poles and wires

RSS Electric Vehicle News from The Driven

  • Polestar unveils conventional rear window in latest Polestar 4 SUV variant
  • “Imagine a city that’s pollution-free:” Volvo delivers first 10 Australia-made battery electric trucks, with 700 km range
  • MG ditches base variants of MGS5 electric SUV, adds more range to flagship model
  • Australian electric vehicle sales by month in 2026 – by model and by brand
  • Tesla starts US production of best-selling 6-seater Model Y L

Press Releases

  • Huge luxury Saudi resort goes 100pct renewables with one of world’s biggest batteries
  • How solar + storage can be a game-changer for people with disabilities

Footer

Technologies

  • Solar
  • Battery/Storage
  • Electric Vehicles
  • Energy Efficiency
  • Software/Gadgets
  • Other Renewables
  • Policy
  • Tariffs
  • Contact
  • Advertise with us
  • About One Step Off The Grid
  • Terms of Use
  • Privacy Policy

Copyright © 2026 · OneStep Genesis on Genesis Framework · WordPress · Log in