You are correct about the shopper, unless it was a large mall and folks were in there for a few hours. I have to admit I was thinking more of working situation where the car sits in the company parking lot. However, its not really fair to expect fully charging your vehicle while shopping. Even with the work situation its more of a top up to get back home.
I agree about the full charge and wasn't expecting a full charge. I am just pointing out the numbers from a quick online search. And those figures I posted are peak output on a clear sunny day; without clouds and of course not at night. And then, in about half of the nation, their latitude would only allow for any meaningful charge for about 6-8 months out of the year.
The biggest illusion with solar is that it is clean. The second illusion is that it is somehow energy dense. We just simply cannot generate enough E with Solar Panels and current tech to outpace the energy density and usage of fossil fuels or Nuclear. Or even newer wind tech. SF6 and NF3 are 2 greenhouse gasses which are about 25k and 13k worse than CO2 respectively and both are released when manufacturing batteries, wires, LCD screens, semi-conductors, and other 'green' materials. Then there is the mining of the raw materials (batteries and solar) and of course the sourcing of those materials comes mainly from China, Russia, and the Dem Rep of the Congo. There are smaller reserves in other areas, like Canada and Australia, but their total resources aren't even close to meeting current demand let alone expected demand in 15 years.
I am all for forward movement/progress. I just see solar as a fool's errand that will set us back and hinder progress on more fruitful fronts.
As I posted earlier in this thread, to meet Biden's 2050 goal of Carbon emissions and renewable energy, we would need an area the size of 4 South Dakotas. So who buys the land? Who buys the equipment? who is giving up their land? what land use is given up? etc.
EV charging stations themselves are currently incredibly expensive. Level 2 and level 3 chargers can currently cost tens of thousands of dollars to purchase and install. Each. And of course, we don't have the grid to support them right now as California found out. CA projects an energy shortfall, annually through 2025 which, by their own estimates, could leave 1.2 million people without power. And that is before the 2026 mandate of 35% of new cars being EV. So we need to increase and strengthen the grid. I just don't see Solar doing this. I also see EV's as a distraction to the actual problem.
https://timesofsandiego.com/busines...of-1700-megawatt-power-shortfall-this-summer/
"One megawatt is about enough electricity to power 750 California homes.
In 2025, the state will still have a capacity shortfall of about 1,800 MW, according to officials from the California Energy Commission, Public Utilities Commission, California Independent System Operator and Newsom's office."