Swap solar energy from the Middle East and North Africa (MENA) for scientific equipment or access to facilities in Europe. Boost the scientific level in the region through exchanges and collaboration. Establish in Cairo a joint European–MENA solar energy center for research and implementation of relevant technologies. Power the region’s scientific facilities with solar energy.
Those are among the ideas that some 250 scientists, policymakers, and others came up with in May at the Solar Energy for Science symposium held at DESY, the Electron Synchrotron laboratory in Hamburg, Germany. The atmosphere at the symposium “was really unbelievable. It was a festival,” says DESY director Helmut Dosch. “You tend to get drunk from the ideas, but we will have to find out what is realistic.”
The symposium was the inauguration of a scientific initiative inspired by and connected to Desertec, a foundation working to realize its founder’s dream: harnessing solar energy from deserts to supply much of the world’s energy demands.