Solar panels have traditionally been made with silicon, over which China has had majority market control. Eager to limit China’s stranglehold over the solar market, countries have been searching for a different way to harness the sun. Now, Japanese engineers “believe they have found one in a type of solar cell that looks and feels like camera film,” according to The Wall Street Journal. The new cell uses perovskite, a crystalline structure formed by minerals that convert sunlight into electricity. The perovskite cell was invented by Japanese scientist and Toin University of Yokohama professor Tsutomu Miyasaka. Iodine is the key element used to manufacture the solar film, of which Japan is the world’s second largest producer.
There has also been a lot of traffic in illegally mined sand. Most of it is for concrete, but some ends up in electronics and solar panels:
China is responsible for a large part of illegal sand mining, because they’re completely willing to steal from anybody to get what they want. They’re a global supplier of silicon because they’re thieves.
12ft.io/https://www.scientificamerican.com/article/sand-mafias-are-plundering-the-earth/