Breakthrough Victoria Challenge launches to drive innovation and tackle solar PV waste

Breakthrough Victoria’s inaugural Challenge was launched today by The Hon. Lily D’Ambrosio, Minister of Energy, Environment and Climate Action and Solar Homes, at Deakin University’s Geelong Waurn Ponds campus, home to the country’s largest solar farm at a university.

With Australia’s healthy appetite for solar energy fuelling a projected surge in end-of-life solar panels, the new Breakthrough Victoria Challenge called on the innovation and recycling community for proposals to develop innovative solutions to reduce solar PV waste.

Solar panel recyclers and innovators are invited to take up the Breakthrough Victoria Challenge through submission of a proposal on Breakthrough Victoria's official Challenge page .

Also at the launch, Breakthrough Victoria CEO Grant Dooley said: “Victoria has a strong track record of innovation, and we are looking for innovators to solve the issue of solar panel waste well before it becomes a much bigger problem.”

“The Breakthrough Victoria Challenge encourages solar and recycling experts across the spectrum of science, technology and infrastructure to look for creative solutions to unlock value in solar panel disposal and recycling.”

Solar energy has played a crucial role in Australia’s transition away from fossil fuels with more than 600,000 installed across Victoria. Panels have an average lifespan of 15 to 25 years before they need replacing due to technological advances, damage or lowered efficiency. With more than three million rooftop solar installations across the country, over 180,000 tonnes of solar panel waste are estimated to be generated in Victoria by 2035, based on Clean Energy Regulator data.

Breakthrough Victoria is calling for novel, commercial and scalable solutions that create high-value products from end-of-life solar panels, reducing the number of panels going to landfill and increasing the return from the panels through clean separation technology. Innovations may include new separation and recycling technologies, collection and logistics developments and ways to maximise harvesting of materials to create new, high value products.

“It’s clear that investment in alternative waste management solutions is needed to develop the technology to generate value in solar recycling,” Mr Dooley said.

“End-of-life solar panels embody the circular economy challenge the industry faces, but also the opportunity of turning a waste stream into a commercial product and creating a strong market for the solar panel recycling industry.

“This is a first step in helping accelerate and scale up a commercially viable system of solar panel recycling in Victoria.”

Watch our Breakthrough Victoria Challenge launch event video here:

To see more details about this year’s theme, head over to the Breakthrough Victoria Challenge page now.

Read the media release here.