Good grief! How many electronic gadgets are you taking along? Half a Circuit City store, from the sounds of it.
Brunton Solaris 6 Charger

In any event, what you want to do is a little tricky. Most portable solar chargers don聮t have receptacles for plugging in batteries; the battery goes into a holder of some sort, then that is connected to the solar unit through an adapter. That聮s the case with Brunton聮s popular Solaris 6 ($129; brunton.com), a compact, folding solar charger that would work great on a hiking/climbing trip. It plugs into electronic devices such as cell phones via a 12v vehicle power adapter, and does the same for AA or AAA chargers. But like many solar chargers, it聮s not even billed as having the ability to charge C, D, or 9v batteries.
Still, for more money, there are options. At a site such as Solarhome.com you can find several models of 聯universal” solar chargers. One such model, the logorrheic 10 Watt High Speed Rollable Universal Solar Battery Charger, sells for $316 and can handle all the batteries you cite. It聮s a little bulky and weighs one pound, seven ounces, but that聮s not too bad.
It might also be possible to adapt an inexpensive universal charger designed for home use聳you can find them for about $20聳and figure out a way to connect it to the Brunton Solaris. I聮m sure your local Radio Shack people could help with this.
But first, I聮d think hard about standardizing my battery needs. I聮m not clear what you would take on a climbing trip that would need a C, D, or 9v. If it doesn聮t take AA聳the most commonly used battery in the world by a factor of five, I imagine聳I wouldn聮t bother with it.
The Gear Guy reports from , the bi-annual gearapalooza in Salt Lake City. Check out his top picks for gear to watch in 2007.