BBC Inside Science

Could solar panels in space be the energy source of the future?

11 snips
Sep 18, 2025
In this engaging discussion, science journalist Caroline Steel joins Professor Henry Snaith, a leading expert on solar cell technologies. They delve into the intriguing potential of space-based solar panels as a viable energy source for Earth, exploring advances in microwave beaming and new cell designs. Additionally, conservation scientist Adam Hart shares insights on unorthodox approaches like trophy hunting for funding wildlife protection, while Simon Parkin recounts the dramatic story of botanists safeguarding Leningrad's seed bank during WWII.
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INSIGHT

How Space Solar Would Deliver Power

  • Space solar panels would send energy to Earth by beaming microwaves to ground receivers for reconversion to electricity.
  • Continuous sunlight in orbit can yield much higher annual energy per unit area than terrestrial panels.
INSIGHT

Economics Determines Timing

  • Economic feasibility depends on earthside storage and transmission advances and future demand growth.
  • Henry Snaith expects space solar may become relevant after 2050 rather than as a near-term net-zero solution.
INSIGHT

Huge Orbital Area Is The Main Constraint

  • Space arrays need vast area but benefit from ~1.3× instantaneous sunlight and near-constant exposure, boosting yearly yield.
  • To replace terrestrial solar fully you'd require enormously large orbital foil areas, making scale a key challenge.
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