The installation robot from Ozzie’s.<\/p><\/div>\n
Installing huge utility-scale solar projects usually requires large field crews performing tedious tasks hundreds of times across many acres of land. New AI and robotics inventions are simplifying some of these job duties, sometimes replacing human workers altogether.<\/p>\n
Companies like Moog Construction, the AES Corporation and Ozzie’s have all released new solutions that take over the most strenuous tasks of lifting and placing solar panels on miles of ground-mounted racks. The different solutions offer varying levels of autonomy, from assisting with lifting heavy panels to doing all the work themselves.<\/p>\n
Moog Construction describes its robot CrewMate<\/a> as a “semi-autonomous lift-assist” tool. The standalone CrewMate hauls panels around a site, then lifts and aligns them with the racking so workers can simply secure them and move on to the next module. The CrewMate completed its first trial installation with Montante Solar in fall 2024 on a capped landfill near Niagara Falls, New York.<\/p>\n \u201cCrewMate is an innovation we believe can safely increase productivity and help meet the demand for new solar farms and workers,\u201d said Steven Erck, VP of Montante Solar, in a press statement. \u201cThe PV panels in this field test are among the largest and heaviest installed by crews; CrewMate took the strain out of installation work that\u2019s often done in high temperatures and remote areas.\u201d<\/p>\n Heavy machine manufacturer Ozzie’s released a lift-assist tool in 2023 that uses a vacuum system to hoist and place solar panels. The OMH-40<\/a> attaches to six-ton excavators and can operate in up to 35-mph winds. Ozzie\u2019s solution was also a Best of Show winner in Solar Power World\u2019s <\/em>2024 Top Products competition<\/a>.<\/p>\n