Standard silicon solar panels do not contain rare earth elements. This is one of the most common misconceptions about solar technology. The panels that cover over 90% of the market are made primarily from silicon, glass, aluminium, copper, and silver. None of these are rare earth elements. The confusion typically arises from conflating “rare earth elements” with “critical minerals” or “minor metals,” which are entirely different categories of materials.
Rare earth elements are a specific group of 17 metallic elements, including neodymium, dysprosium, and lanthanum. These are essential components in wind turbines, electric vehicle motors, and some electronics, but they are not used in photovoltaic solar cells themselves. Where rare earths do appear in the solar ecosystem is in supporting components like inverters and tracking system motors, not in the panels that convert sunlight to electricity.
This guide clarifies the difference between rare earth elements and the critical minerals that solar panels actually contain. Understanding what is really inside your panels matters for supply chain awareness, environmental considerations, and cutting through misinformation about solar technology. Whether you are considering installing panels or simply want accurate information, this guide separates fact from fiction.
Quick Overview
| Do silicon solar panels contain rare earths? | No |
| Main materials in silicon panels | Silicon, glass, aluminium, copper, silver |
| Do thin-film panels contain rare earths? | No (they use different critical minerals) |
| Where rare earths are used in solar | Inverters, tracking motors (not panels) |
| Silicon panel market share | Over 90% |
What Are Rare Earth Elements
The 17 Rare Earth Elements
| Category | Elements |
|---|---|
| Light rare earths | Lanthanum (La), Cerium (Ce), Praseodymium (Pr), Neodymium (Nd), Promethium (Pm), Samarium (Sm), Europium (Eu) |
| Heavy rare earths | Gadolinium (Gd), Terbium (Tb), Dysprosium (Dy), Holmium (Ho), Erbium (Er), Thulium (Tm), Ytterbium (Yb), Lutetium (Lu) |
| Related elements | Scandium (Sc), Yttrium (Y) |
Why They Are Called “Rare”
| Fact | Explanation |
|---|---|
| Not actually scarce | Many rare earths are more abundant in Earth’s crust than gold or platinum |
| “Rare” refers to distribution | Dispersed in low concentrations; rarely found in mineable deposits |
| Difficult to extract | Costly and complex to mine and refine economically |
| Often found together | Multiple rare earths occur in same ore; separation is challenging |
Common Uses of Rare Earths
| Application | Key Elements | Why Used |
|---|---|---|
| Permanent magnets | Neodymium, dysprosium | Strongest magnets available |
| Wind turbines | Neodymium, praseodymium | Direct-drive generator magnets |
| Electric vehicle motors | Neodymium, dysprosium | High-efficiency motors |
| Smartphones | Various | Speakers, vibration motors, screens |
| MRI machines | Neodymium | Powerful magnets |
| Lasers | Yttrium, neodymium | Optical properties |
What Silicon Solar Panels Actually Contain
Material Composition by Weight
For a full breakdown of what goes into a panel and how the parts fit together, see our guide to solar panel components, or our deep dive on how solar panels are made.
| Material | Percentage | Rare Earth? | Critical Mineral? |
|---|---|---|---|
| Glass | 70-76% | No | No |
| Aluminium (frame) | 10-15% | No | Yes |
| Polymers (EVA, backsheet) | 5-7% | No | No |
| Silicon | 3-5% | No | Yes |
| Copper | ~1% | No | Yes |
| Silver | 0.05-0.1% | No | Yes |
| Other (tin, lead) | Trace | No | No |
Role of Each Material
| Material | Function in Panel |
|---|---|
| Silicon | Semiconductor; absorbs photons and generates electrons |
| Glass | Protection; allows light transmission |
| Aluminium | Frame; structural support and mounting |
| Copper | Wiring; conducts electricity between cells |
| Silver | Contact fingers; collects electrons from silicon |
| EVA polymer | Encapsulant; protects cells and bonds layers |
| Backsheet | Rear protection; moisture barrier |
None of These Are Rare Earths
| Material | Classification | Abundance |
|---|---|---|
| Silicon | Metalloid; semiconductor | Second most abundant element in Earth’s crust |
| Aluminium | Base metal | Third most abundant element in Earth’s crust |
| Copper | Base metal | Widely available; mined in 56+ countries |
| Silver | Precious metal | Rare but not a rare earth element |
| Glass | Silica-based compound | Abundant |
Critical Minerals vs Rare Earths
Understanding the Difference
| Term | Definition | Examples |
|---|---|---|
| Rare earth elements | Specific group of 17 metallic elements | Neodymium, dysprosium, lanthanum |
| Critical minerals | Materials essential for economy/security with vulnerable supply chains | Lithium, cobalt, silicon, copper, gallium |
| Minor metals | By-products of base metal refining; small quantities | Indium, gallium, tellurium, selenium |
| Precious metals | High-value metals | Silver, gold, platinum |
Why the Confusion Exists
| Reason | Explanation |
|---|---|
| Similar-sounding terms | “Rare metals” and “rare earths” sound interchangeable but are not |
| Both involve supply concerns | Critical minerals and rare earths both have geopolitical issues |
| Media conflation | News articles often blur distinctions |
| Anti-solar messaging | Some sources deliberately spread misinformation |
| Wind turbine association | Wind power does use rare earths; solar gets lumped in |
Solar vs Wind: Materials Comparison
| Technology | Uses Rare Earths? | Where? |
|---|---|---|
| Solar PV panels | No | N/A |
| Solar inverters | Yes (magnets) | Transformer cores; some electronics |
| Solar tracking motors | Yes (magnets) | Permanent magnet motors |
| Wind turbines | Yes | Generator magnets (especially direct-drive) |
| Electric vehicles | Yes | Motor magnets |
Thin-Film Solar Panel Materials
Thin-Film Technologies
| Technology | Market Share | Key Materials |
|---|---|---|
| Cadmium Telluride (CdTe) | ~5% | Cadmium, tellurium |
| CIGS | ~2% | Copper, indium, gallium, selenium |
| Amorphous silicon | <1% | Silicon (thin layer) |
CdTe Panel Materials
| Material | Classification | Rare Earth? | Notes |
|---|---|---|---|
| Cadmium | Minor metal | No | By-product of zinc mining |
| Tellurium | Minor metal; critical mineral | No | By-product of copper refining; relatively scarce |
| Glass | Common material | No | Substrate and cover |
CIGS Panel Materials
| Material | Classification | Rare Earth? | Notes |
|---|---|---|---|
| Copper | Base metal | No | Widely available |
| Indium | Minor metal; critical mineral | No | By-product of zinc; 95% from China |
| Gallium | Minor metal; critical mineral | No | By-product of aluminium; 95% from China |
| Selenium | Minor metal | No | By-product of copper refining |
Key Point: Still No Rare Earths
| Panel Type | Contains Rare Earths | Contains Critical Minerals |
|---|---|---|
| Crystalline silicon | No | Yes (silicon, copper, silver) |
| CdTe thin-film | No | Yes (tellurium) |
| CIGS thin-film | No | Yes (indium, gallium) |
Where Rare Earths Are Used in Solar Systems
Inverters
| Component | Rare Earth Use | Element |
|---|---|---|
| Transformer cores | Some designs | Various |
| Capacitors | Some types | Lanthanum, cerium |
| Magnets | High-efficiency units | Neodymium |
Tracking Systems
| Component | Rare Earth Use | Purpose |
|---|---|---|
| Motor magnets | Neodymium magnets | High torque, compact motors |
| Gearbox alternatives | Direct-drive systems | Eliminate mechanical gearboxes |
Emerging Technologies (Research Stage)
Most next-generation solar technologies remain rare-earth-free. For more on the current research frontier, see our guides to perovskite solar panels and quantum dot solar cells.
| Technology | Potential Rare Earth Use | Status |
|---|---|---|
| Rare earth doping | Efficiency enhancement | Research; not commercial |
| Quantum dot cells | Some formulations | Experimental |
| Perovskite cells | Generally rare-earth-free | Emerging commercial |
Supply Chain Considerations
Silicon Panel Supply Chain
Geographic concentration is a real concern for polysilicon, even though it’s not a rare earth issue. Our guide comparing American vs Chinese solar panels covers this in more depth.
| Material | Main Producers | Supply Risk |
|---|---|---|
| Polysilicon | China (~80%), USA, Germany | Moderate (concentration) |
| Aluminium | China, Russia, India, Canada | Low (diverse sources) |
| Copper | Chile, Peru, China, USA (56+ countries) | Low (widely distributed) |
| Silver | Mexico, Peru, China, Poland | Moderate (price volatility) |
| Glass | Global | Low |
Thin-Film Supply Chain
| Material | Main Producers | Supply Risk |
|---|---|---|
| Tellurium | China, Japan, Canada, Russia | High (scarce; by-product) |
| Indium | China (60%), South Korea, Japan | High (concentration) |
| Gallium | China (95%) | Very high (extreme concentration) |
| Cadmium | China, South Korea, Japan | Moderate (by-product of zinc) |
Comparison to Wind Power
| Technology | Rare Earth Dependence | Supply Chain Risk |
|---|---|---|
| Solar PV (silicon) | None in panels | Moderate (silicon concentration) |
| Solar PV (thin-film) | None | Higher (scarce minor metals) |
| Wind (geared) | Low | Moderate |
| Wind (direct-drive) | High | High (neodymium, dysprosium) |
Environmental and Ethical Considerations
The supply-chain and sourcing side of solar has real environmental and labour-rights considerations even without the rare-earth complication. See our guides to the carbon footprint of solar manufacturing and ethical solar panel sourcing for the details.
Mining Impacts by Material
| Material | Key Concerns |
|---|---|
| Silicon (quartz) | Energy-intensive purification; some dust concerns |
| Copper | Water use; tailings; acid mine drainage |
| Silver | Often by-product; shared impacts with lead/zinc mining |
| Aluminium | Bauxite mining; red mud waste; energy-intensive smelting |
| Tellurium | By-product of copper; limited environmental impact |
| Indium/Gallium | By-products; concentration in China raises ESG concerns |
Solar vs Rare Earth Mining
| Aspect | Solar Panel Materials | Rare Earth Mining |
|---|---|---|
| Radioactive waste | None | Common (thorium/uranium in ore) |
| Acid use | Some (silicon purification) | Extensive |
| Water contamination risk | Moderate (copper mining) | High |
| Geographic concentration | Moderate | Very high (China dominates) |
Recycling Potential
| Material | Recyclability | Current Recovery Rate |
|---|---|---|
| Glass | Excellent | 90-95% |
| Aluminium | Excellent | ~100% |
| Silicon | Good (improving) | 80-95% |
| Copper | Excellent | 90%+ |
| Silver | Good | 70-95% |
| Rare earths | Challenging | Low (<1% globally) |
Future Technology Trends
Reducing Material Use
| Trend | Material Affected | Impact |
|---|---|---|
| Thinner wafers | Silicon | Less silicon per watt |
| Silver reduction | Silver | 40-50% less silver vs 2010 |
| Copper plating | Silver | Copper replacing silver contacts |
| Higher efficiency | All | More watts per kg of material |
Emerging Technologies
| Technology | Rare Earth Content | Status |
|---|---|---|
| Perovskite cells | Generally none | Commercial pilots |
| Tandem cells (perovskite/silicon) | None | Early commercial |
| Organic PV | None | Niche applications |
| Quantum dots | Some formulations may use | Research |
Research into Rare Earth Enhancement
| Research Area | Purpose | Commercial Status |
|---|---|---|
| Rare earth doping | Improve light absorption | Laboratory only |
| Upconversion layers | Capture more spectrum | Experimental |
| Luminescent coatings | Efficiency enhancement | Limited commercial use |
Addressing Common Misconceptions
Misinformation about solar is common. Our guide on whether solar panels are dangerous addresses several of the other recurring myths around solar safety and materials.
Myth vs Reality
| Myth | Reality |
|---|---|
| “Solar panels are full of rare earths” | Standard silicon panels contain zero rare earth elements |
| “Solar is as bad as wind for rare earths” | Wind turbines use rare earths in magnets; solar panels do not |
| “We’ll run out of materials for solar” | Silicon is the second most abundant element on Earth |
| “Solar panels can’t be recycled” | 85-95% of materials recoverable; no rare earth complications |
| “China controls all solar materials” | Silicon supply more diverse than rare earths; aluminium and copper widely distributed |
Why Misinformation Spreads
| Source | Motivation |
|---|---|
| Fossil fuel interests | Undermine solar adoption |
| Confused journalism | Conflating different mineral categories |
| Wind/EV conflation | Lumping all renewables together |
| Complexity | “Critical minerals” sounds like “rare earths” |
Frequently Asked Questions
Basic Questions
| Question | Answer |
|---|---|
| Do solar panels contain rare earths? | No; standard silicon panels contain zero rare earth elements |
| What about thin-film panels? | Also no rare earths; they use different critical minerals (tellurium, indium, gallium) |
| Where are rare earths used in solar? | Some inverters and tracking system motors, not panels |
| Why do people think solar uses rare earths? | Confusion between rare earths and critical minerals; conflation with wind power |
Material Questions
| Question | Answer |
|---|---|
| What is the most critical material in solar? | Polysilicon (concentrated production); silver (cost); copper (volume growth) |
| Is silicon rare? | No; second most abundant element in Earth’s crust |
| Is silver a rare earth? | No; it’s a precious metal, not a rare earth element |
| Are gallium and indium rare earths? | No; they are minor metals/critical minerals, different category |
Summary
| Key Point | Details |
|---|---|
| Silicon panels and rare earths | Zero rare earth content |
| Thin-film panels and rare earths | Zero rare earth content |
| Main materials in 90%+ of panels | Silicon, glass, aluminium, copper, silver |
| Critical minerals vs rare earths | Different categories; often confused |
| Where solar does use rare earths | Some inverters and tracking motors only |
| Wind vs solar | Wind turbines use rare earths; solar panels do not |
The claim that solar panels contain rare earth elements is simply incorrect. Standard crystalline silicon panels, which represent over 90% of the global market, are made from silicon, glass, aluminium, copper, and silver. None of these materials are rare earth elements. Thin-film technologies like CdTe and CIGS use different critical minerals such as tellurium, indium, and gallium, but these too are not rare earths. The confusion stems from conflating “rare earth elements” with the broader category of “critical minerals.”
Rare earth elements are a specific group of 17 metallic elements including neodymium, dysprosium, and lanthanum. These are essential in wind turbine generators, electric vehicle motors, and electronics, but they play no role in the photovoltaic cells that convert sunlight to electricity. Where rare earths do appear in solar energy systems is in supporting components like inverter magnets and tracking system motors, not in the panels themselves.
Understanding this distinction matters for several reasons. It helps homeowners and businesses make informed decisions based on accurate information. It clarifies that solar panel recycling does not face the same challenges as rare earth recovery. And it demonstrates that solar power has a different and generally more favourable supply chain profile than wind power or electric vehicles when it comes to rare earth dependence.
The materials that solar panels do contain come with their own supply chain considerations. Polysilicon production is concentrated in China, silver prices can be volatile, and thin-film materials like tellurium and indium are genuinely scarce. But these are separate issues from rare earth availability, and addressing them requires understanding what solar panels actually contain rather than what misinformation suggests.
If you come across someone claiming solar panels are full of rare earths, the fastest rebuttal is specifics: name the actual materials (silicon, glass, aluminium, copper, silver) and note that none of them appear on the 17-element rare earth list. The conflation is almost always with wind turbine magnets or EV motors, which do use neodymium and dysprosium.
Real supply-chain questions for solar are worth asking – polysilicon concentration in China, silver price volatility, thin-film scarce-metal dependence – but these are different conversations from the rare earth myth. Frame them as what they are.