Solar energy is one of the most talked-about renewable energy sources in the world right now. But for industrial companies facing real pressure to cut emissions, understanding how it actually works, what it can do, and where it falls short is far more useful than headlines about clean energy potential. This article answers the most common questions about solar energy directly, so you can form a clear picture of where it fits—and where it does not.
Relying on solar alone leaves industrial decarbonization targets out of reach
Solar energy generates electricity, but most industrial processes need heat, often at temperatures that solar panels simply cannot supply. Companies that anchor their decarbonization strategy around solar risk missing their emissions targets for high-temperature operations entirely. The fix is not to abandon solar, but to pair it with technologies specifically designed for industrial heat, so the full scope of Scope 1 emissions is addressed—not just the electricity side of the balance sheet.
Intermittency is not just an inconvenience; it is a production risk
Industrial operations run around the clock. Solar energy production does not. When a facility depends on solar-generated electricity or heat and cloud cover arrives, output drops. For continuous production lines in sectors like food processing, specialty chemicals, or pulp and paper, that variability creates real operational exposure. Addressing this means either investing heavily in storage infrastructure or choosing energy carriers that are inherently storable and dispatchable, so production continuity is never tied to weather conditions.
What is solar energy and how is it produced?
Solar energy is energy captured from sunlight and converted into electricity or heat. It is produced using photovoltaic (PV) panels, which turn light directly into electrical current, or solar thermal collectors, which absorb heat from the sun. Solar is a renewable energy source because sunlight is continuously available and produces no direct emissions during operation.
The sun emits radiation across a spectrum of wavelengths. When this radiation reaches a solar panel, semiconductor materials inside the panel absorb photons and release electrons, creating a flow of electrical current. This process, known as the photovoltaic effect, is the foundation of modern solar electricity generation.
Solar thermal systems work differently. Instead of generating electricity, they use mirrors or collectors to concentrate sunlight and heat a fluid, which can then be used for space heating, water heating, or in some industrial applications. The two technologies—PV and solar thermal—serve different purposes and are often confused.
How do solar panels convert sunlight into electricity?
Solar panels convert sunlight into electricity through the photovoltaic effect. When photons from sunlight strike a semiconductor material, typically silicon, they knock electrons loose. These free electrons flow through the material as direct current (DC) electricity. An inverter then converts this DC output into alternating current (AC), which is what most electrical systems use.
Each solar panel is made up of individual solar cells wired together. A single cell produces a small voltage, so cells are grouped into panels, and panels are grouped into arrays to generate usable amounts of power. The amount of electricity produced depends on the intensity of sunlight, the angle of the panels, temperature, and the efficiency of the cells themselves.
Most commercial solar panels today use monocrystalline or polycrystalline silicon. Monocrystalline panels are cut from a single silicon crystal and tend to be more efficient. Polycrystalline panels use multiple silicon fragments and are generally less expensive to manufacture. Thin-film panels represent a third category, using different materials and offering flexibility in application, though typically at lower efficiency levels.
What are the different types of solar energy systems?
There are three main types of solar energy systems: grid-connected (on-grid) systems, off-grid systems, and hybrid systems. Grid-connected systems feed electricity into the public grid and draw from it when solar output is low. Off-grid systems operate independently with battery storage. Hybrid systems combine grid connection with on-site storage for greater reliability.
Within these categories, systems can be further divided by their application:
- Residential PV systems: Rooftop panels generating electricity for homes, typically small-scale and grid-connected.
- Commercial and industrial PV systems: Larger arrays on industrial rooftops or ground-mounted, designed to offset electricity demand.
- Utility-scale solar farms: Large ground-mounted installations feeding directly into the electricity grid.
- Concentrated solar power (CSP): Uses mirrors to concentrate sunlight and generate steam for electricity production, mainly used in high-irradiance regions.
- Solar thermal systems: Designed specifically for heat generation rather than electricity, used for water heating and some low-temperature industrial processes.
For industrial operators, the distinction between electricity-generating PV systems and heat-generating solar thermal systems matters significantly. Most industrial heat demand requires temperatures well above what solar thermal systems can reliably deliver at scale.
How efficient are solar panels at converting sunlight?
Most commercial solar panels convert between 15% and 22% of incoming sunlight into electricity. Premium monocrystalline panels can reach the higher end of that range, while standard polycrystalline panels typically fall between 15% and 17%. Laboratory cells have achieved higher efficiencies, but these figures do not reflect real-world commercial performance.
Several factors reduce efficiency in practice. High temperatures cause silicon cells to perform less well, which is counterintuitive given that solar panels need sunlight. Dust, shading, and panel degradation over time all contribute to output losses. System-level losses from wiring, inverters, and mismatch between panels also reduce the total energy delivered.
For context, comparing solar panel efficiency to other energy systems requires care. An Iron Fuel Boiler, for example, achieves up to 95% energy efficiency in converting fuel to usable heat. Solar PV produces electricity at 15% to 22% conversion efficiency from sunlight, but the comparison is not direct because the inputs—sunlight versus stored fuel—behave very differently in industrial settings. You can read more about how Iron Fuel Technology achieves high energy efficiency in industrial heat applications.
What are the limitations of solar energy for industrial use?
Solar energy has three core limitations for industrial use: it generates electricity rather than high-temperature heat, it is intermittent and weather-dependent, and it requires significant land or roof space. Most industrial processes need heat at temperatures above 200°C, which solar PV cannot supply directly and which solar thermal systems struggle to reach at scale.
High-temperature industrial processes, such as those in food production, chemical manufacturing, and pulp and paper, typically require steam or hot gases at temperatures ranging from 200°C to well above 1,000°C. Solar thermal collectors can reach useful temperatures for low-grade heat applications, but concentrated solar power systems capable of higher temperatures are expensive, geographically constrained, and not practical for most European or northern industrial sites.
Intermittency is a structural challenge. Industrial production lines cannot pause when clouds arrive. Battery storage can buffer short interruptions, but storing enough energy to sustain a large industrial facility through extended low-sunlight periods requires investment that often undermines the economic case for solar alone.
Land and roof requirements also add up quickly. A large industrial facility would need substantial surface area to generate a meaningful share of its heat or power demand from solar, which is not always available or practical in dense industrial zones.
How does solar energy compare to other renewable energy sources?
Solar energy compares well on cost and scalability for electricity generation, but less well for industrial heat. Wind energy shares the intermittency challenge. Biomass can generate heat but raises sustainability concerns around land use and emissions. Hydrogen can produce high-temperature heat but faces infrastructure and cost barriers. Each renewable source has a specific range of applications where it performs best.
The comparison becomes clearer when framed around what industrial operators actually need:
- Electricity generation: Solar PV and wind are cost-competitive and widely deployed. Both are intermittent, which requires grid balancing or storage.
- Low-temperature heat (below 100°C): Solar thermal can be effective for water heating and some process-heat applications.
- Medium-temperature heat (100°C to 400°C): Options narrow significantly. Heat pumps, biomass, and some solar thermal systems can contribute, but each has constraints.
- High-temperature heat (above 400°C): This is where most renewable options struggle. Hydrogen combustion and iron fuel combustion are among the few technologies capable of delivering clean heat at these temperatures reliably.
For sustainability managers evaluating their full energy footprint, the honest answer is that no single renewable energy source covers all needs. Solar is a strong choice for electricity. For decarbonizing high-temperature industrial heat, different technologies are required. Exploring the full range of clean heat solutions for industrial applications helps clarify which combination makes sense for a specific facility.
How Iron Fuel Technology helps with industrial heat decarbonization
Solar energy is a valuable part of the renewable energy mix, but it does not solve the hardest part of industrial decarbonization: high-temperature heat. That is exactly the gap we address at RIFT with Iron Fuel Technology.
Here is what makes it a practical option for industrial operators:
- Zero direct CO2 emissions: Iron fuel combustion produces no carbon dioxide. The only CO2 in the system comes from a pilot safety flame, totaling just 10 kg per MWh of heat produced.
- High-temperature heat on demand: The Iron Fuel Boiler generates flames up to 2,000°C, making it suitable for the most demanding industrial heat applications.
- Up to 95% energy efficiency: The system converts fuel to usable heat at efficiency levels that outperform many fossil fuel alternatives.
- Storable and dispatchable: Iron powder is a solid-state energy carrier. It does not depend on weather, grid conditions, or real-time renewable generation.
- Compatible with existing infrastructure: The Iron Fuel Boiler is designed to work alongside existing fossil fuel boilers, reducing the need for a complete facility overhaul.
- Circular by design: After combustion, iron oxide is regenerated back into iron fuel using hydrogen, completing a closed cycle with no waste.
If your facility relies on high-temperature heat and you are weighing your decarbonization options, we would be glad to talk through what Iron Fuel Technology could mean for your operations. Get in touch with our team to start the conversation.