Back in 2018, one industry source said<\/a> it was premature to focus on solar panel recycling in the United States, but almost five years later, significant steps are being taken to establish protocols to bring more sustainability to the solar industry. From solar panel recycling to waste cleanup on project sites to better packaging for shipments, the solar industry is greening-up its image.<\/p>\n Members of SEIA\u2019s PV Recycling Working Group<\/a> began making recycling checklists and finding preferred partners in 2019, and a grassroots website (SolarRecycle.org<\/a>) has collected information on reuse, resale and recycle outlets that accept solar materials. But the biggest step forward for the solar recycling space came with the 2022 founding of SolarCycle<\/a>, a PV-technology-based recycler that opened a processing facility in Odessa, Texas, that recovers 95% of a solar panel\u2019s value. Both national residential installer Sunrun<\/a> and utility-scale developer Silicon Ranch<\/a> have inked partnerships with SolarCycle to process end-of-life modules.<\/p>\n Credit: PVpallet<\/p><\/div>\n \u201cAs Sunrun deploys PV systems at the scale needed to confront the climate crisis, we\u2019ve embraced the responsibility and opportunity of managing the full lifecycle of our hardware,\u201d said Mary Powell, CEO of Sunrun, in a statement. \u201cWe are committed to sustainable end-of-life processes and excited to partner with an innovative company that shares our vision and is dedicated to creating a circular supply chain for the solar industry.\u201d<\/p>\n In addition to end-of-life forward-thinking, some innovators are working on ways to prevent premature solar panel scrapping due to delivery damage. PVpallet began testing its collapsible, plastic<\/a> pallet in late 2021 and found a 100% success rate with Greentech Renewables<\/a> delivering panels to Palmetto Solar. Where previously Greentech was reporting 10 broken modules each month, PVpallet\u2019s vertically stacked setup prevented forklift damage and distributed weight during transit, leading to no broken panels. More distributors, including BayWa r.e.<\/a>, have signed on to use PVpallets in warehouses and deliveries.<\/p>\n Those reusable pallets also cut down on wooden pallet waste at project sites, a focus for Green Clean Solar<\/a>. Founded by industry veteran Emilie O\u2019Leary in 2022, the company supports waste diversion by taking cardboard, shrink wrap and more refuse associated with solar product delivery out of landfills and into recycling centers. In addition to trash pickup, Green Clean Solar helps with solar panel decommissioning and complete solar site cleanup.<\/p>\n<\/a>