If You Can Make Solar Power Better, Google Will Give You $1 Million
“Smaller
is baller,” “Min it to win it,” “Think shrink.”
Those
are the puns Google is using to promote its new competition: $1 million to
whomever can invent a working power inverter for solar and other forms of
renewable energy that’s roughly as small as a laptop. The company has teamed up
with the Institute of Electrical and Electronics Engineers to launch the
competition.
For
background, a power inverter is a box that takes alternating current (AC) out
of a direct current (DC) — such as a solar array — and applies that AC to run
things in our homes, offices, and businesses. In order to use the DC power
generated from wind turbines and solar panels, it must be converted into
alternating current, via a power inverter.
“Much
of our domestic world relies on AC,” the tech blog Venture
beat explains. “And AC needs robust power distribution grids, huge power
plants and either fossil fuel, nuclear power, or falling water.”
As
they are currently, inverters for solar and wind are, according to Google, too
big — “roughly the size of a picnic cooler,” the company said on its new
website for the “Littlebox Challenge.” But if they can be shrunk down to the
size of a tablet or laptop, the company says, it would “enable more
solar-powered homes, more efficient distributed electrical grids, and could
help bring electricity to the most remote parts of the planet.”
“There
will be obstacles to overcome; like the conventional wisdom of engineering”,
Google Green’s Eric Raymond said in a statement announcing the competition.
“But whoever gets it done will help change the future of electricity.”
The
challenge for engineers is to design and build a 1-kilowatt-minimum power
inverter with a power density of at least 50 watts per cubic inch — not an
insane amount of power, but enough to fuel some lights and a box fan.
Applicants must register by September and submit their ideas by July 15 of next
year. Eighteen finalists will be chosen, and a grand prize winner will be
announced sometime in January 2016, the company said.
Google
has long-promoted increased use of renewable energy, but its relationship with
it has been a bit of a puzzle. The company’s Google Green subsidiary has
invested millions in clean energy projects throughout the last decade, with
an eventual goal to power its data centers with 100 percent renewable
energy. The company claims that, with purchased offsets, its carbon footprint
is zero, meaning it does not contribute to climate change. So far, Google has
sunk more than $1 billion into wind and solar projects that in total
generate more than 2 gigawatts of power.
At
the same time, however, Google has hosted fundraisers to benefit one of the
U.S. Senate’s most vehement climate deniers, and is a member of the
American Legislative Exchange Council (ALEC) — a corporate lobbyist
group that actively works to thwart statewide renewable energy programs.
The
two-way relationship has raised questions about the company’s intentions among
some environmentalists, who are asking Google to cut ties with the
anti-climate group. But one possible explanation for the company’s partnership
with interests purportedly contrary to their own is that it’s necessary to help
sway them to their side, as Tim Worstall in Forbes notes.
“Sadly,
the way that the modern economy works is that government, at all levels, has a
great deal of influence over how business works,” he writes. “So, it is
necessary for a large business to flash the cash around to both sides, to join
lobby groups from all sides of the political compass.”
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