The 12- x 12-foot panels, which each cost $6,900, are designed to be embedded into roads. When shined upon, each panel generates an estimated 7.6 kilowatt hours of power each day. If this electricity could be pumped into the grid, the company predicts that a four-lane, one-mile stretch of road with panels could generate enough power for 500 homes. Although it would be expensive, covering the entire US interstate highway system with the panels could theoretically fulfill the country's total energy needs. The company estimates that this would take 5 billion panels, but could "produce three times more power than we've ever used as a nation - almost enough to power the entire world."
The Solar Road Panels also contain embedded LED lights that "paint" the road lines from beneath to provide safer nighttime driving. The LEDs could also be programmed to alert drivers of detours or road construction ahead, and can even sense wildlife on the road and warn drivers to slow down. The roads could also contain embedded heating elements in the surface to prevent snow and ice from building up on the road. Further, in the future, fully electric vehicles could recharge along the roadway and in parking lots, making electric cars practical for long trips.
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Image: Solar Roadways
Secondly, I'd be interested to see the combined cost of all the coal and nuclear power plants across the US(including the cost of mining, processing, and dealing with the coal and nuclear fuel) along with the costs associated with road painting(one might be surprised at how much that costs) as compared to the projected costs of installing and maintaining these solar roads
Rainy days would make them as slick as ice, or do we all stay home when it rains, as less power will be generated?
It's not a viable solution, but what the research turns up, may well lead to one.
Also the road panel idea couldn't be carried out by a government, unless they wanted to nationalise electricity production.