Why perovskite solar cells are the next big thing – ioplus.nl

Solar panels on your car, window, or jacket? Perovskite solar cells could make it happen — if the technology delivers.
Published on April 29, 2026
© Oxford PV
Mauro swapped Sardinia for Eindhoven and has been an IO+ editor for 3 years. As a GREEN+ expert, he covers the energy transition with data-driven stories.
Solar energy is the most abundant form of energy available to us. Thanks to declining costs, solar panel installations worldwide have grown exponentially. In 2024, solar photovoltaic contributed 7% of the world’s electricity production in 2024 and 13% of the EU’s electricity production in 2025. Yet, solar production is confined to rooftops or standing solar farms.  But what if we could have solar panels on cars, facades, and lightweight roofs? Perovskite solar cells could unlock these possibilities, paving the way for more versatile solar energy solutions. 
Perovskite solar cells are an emerging technology that promises cheaper, lighter, and more versatile solar solutions than conventional solar panels. The term perovskite doesn’t refer to a specific material, but to a whole family of compounds. These materials have structural similarity to a homonymous mineral discovered in 1839 by the German scientist Gustav Rose, who named them after Russian mineralogist Lev Perovski. 
Yet, it wasn’t until 2009 that a group of Japanese researchers made the first perovskite solar cell. Years later, perovskite solar cells are emerging as a disruptive technology for harvesting the sun's energy. Let’s see what they can offer. 
From revolutionary wind turbines to futuristic materials, a lot is happening in green tech. But what are all these technologies about? And why should we care? In Green Tech Decoded, we explain how these innovations work and why they could redefine our society.
Perovskite solar panels, however, are not made with the naturally occurring materials discovered by Perovski. Still, the materials used to make them are engineered to have a structure similar to that of perovskites. 
The basis of these new solar cells is the so-called metal-halide perovskites, usually made in the lab by mixing different materials. Usually, it works by combining an organic compound (such as methylammonium or formamidinium), a metal (such as tin or lead), and a halide (iodine or bromine). These are all widely available materials and differ from conventional modules in the way they harvest sunlight. 
In a perovskite solar cell, the active layer, an absorbing material, captures light and excites electrons. When these electrons are extracted, they generate electricity. Moreover, perovskites absorb well in the blue and green part of the light spectrum (higher energy), while silicon solar cells perform well in the red and infrared part of the spectrum (lower energy). This means that perovskites can harvest more of the sun’s light. 
The novel solar cells come with some advantages over conventional silicon solar panels. 
As technology advances, some drawbacks emerge. 
Perovskite solar technologies are making strides towards better efficiency. At the moment, the commercially available cells can guarantee anywhere from 24 to 29% efficiency. The figure grows for tandem solar cells, with certified efficiencies passing 35%
As is often the case with green technologies, China is way ahead of its competitors, with some of its companies producing perovskite solar modules at scale. For instance, in June 2025, GCL Optoelectronics opened the first gigawatt-scale perovskite PV factory. The firm had previously achieved 19% efficiency for its purely perovskite modules and over 29% efficiency for tandem cells.  
UtmoLight, also Chinese, also opened a 1 GW production line in February 2025. Unlike other competitors, it offers a 25-year power output guarantee. Moreover, its modules have already been deployed across solar commercial projects in China. 
Western counterparts are yet to achieve those levels. The British Oxford PV is one of the most relevant players in the perovskite solar space. The spinoff of the University of Oxford was the first to ship commercial tandem solar modules. Grounded in over a decade of research, the company’s current modules can deliver 25% efficiency, aiming for 30% by 2030. 
China has the upper hand, while European producers are still in the early stages. For Europe, the question is not only about the technology’s validity, but also about establishing a competitive industry. Opportunities exist, but the Old Continent has to seize them
Perovskite solar panels are gradually reaching the market as efficiency records are broken and new, cost-competitive manufacturing processes emerge. Still, many hurdles remain: stability, toxicity, and production upscaling. If those boxes are ticked, perovskite could do to solar energy what LEDs did to lighting — making it cheaper, lighter, and available in places we never imagined.
We are IO+, an independent journalism platform where the future of the Netherlands takes shape and innovators come together.

source

This entry was posted in Renewables. Bookmark the permalink.

Leave a Reply