Ørsted to partner with SOLARCYCLE to recycle end-of-life solar panels

Ørsted announced a new partnership with SOLARCYCLE, a technology-based solar recycling company, to process and recycle Ørsted’s end-of-life solar panels from its projects across the U.S.

Ørsted, known mostly in New Jersey for its efforts in offshore and onshore wind, is one of the leading green energy companies in the world, as it also develops, constructs and operates solar farms, energy storage facilities, renewable hydrogen and green fuels facilities and bioenergy plants.

Ørsted will use SOLARCYCLE’s recycling facility in Texas to extract the valuable materials from panels, including metals like silver, copper and aluminium — and materials such as glass and silicon.

SOLARCYCLE can take these materials and refine them to make the next generation of newer, higher-efficiency solar panels.

Ingrid Reumert, head of global stakeholder relations at Ørsted, said the partnership matches the mission and vision of the compnay.

“With this global solar commitment, Ørsted is leveraging its position as a leader in sustainability and renewable energy to incentivize the creation of a market for the recycling of solar panels,” she said. “With the SOLARCYCLE partnership, we’re taking the first tangible steps to ensure that critical materials needed for green energy will be reused or recycled.”

Solar energy is a key technology for the green energy transition and for limiting global warming. The deployment of this technology requires vast amounts of virgin materials. The mining of these has environmental and social impacts, and competition to secure access to these materials is on the rise.

To lower dependency on virgin materials, a key solution is to reuse or recycle end-of-life solar panels and bring the materials back into manufacturing.

Today, reusing and recycling solar panels is limited, and landfilling is still common practice. This means that materials with a high value to the green energy transition are simply let go to waste.

Ørsted has been growing its onshore portfolio in the past few years with the ambition of reaching 17.5 gigawatts of wind and solar PV capacity for its global onshore portfolio by 2030.

“We want to create a world that runs entirely on green energy, and we want to do it in a sustainable way,” Reumert said. “Addressing the most critical waste problem of the solar industry, while mitigating social and environmental impacts in the supply chain, is essential to doing so. This is an industry-first commitment and complements our already existing ambition to reuse or recycle all wind turbine blades.”