Wednesday, November 11, 2009

Largest solar energy home community showcased in S California

LOS ANGELES, Nov. 10 (Xinhua) -- The largest solar powered community in the U.S. with 384 units completed its first phase and opened to the public Tuesday in Santa Fe Springs, Southern California.

California Governor Arnold Schwarzenegger sent his representative Alexander Kim to congratulate on the opening.

Schwarzenegger is an active advocator of solar powered homes. He has set a goal to have 1 million homes with solar roof. He said the Villages at Heritage Springs is a model for California and also for the whole country.

Named the Villages at Heritage Springs, the 50-acre community is now offering the first 18 single-family homes and 19 town homes for sale.

When fully built-out, the community will include 384 residences. All of these homes feature the latest in solar power and energy-efficient technology that is expected to reduce homeowner's power bills by up to 60 percent.

"Villages at Heritage Springs is a look at the future of home building," said Tabassom Ayazi, Vice President for Comstock Homes Sales and Marketing.

"Making homes more energy-efficient and giving them solar power should not be an after thought. Conserving energy and saving money should be a consideration before the house is built," said Ayazi.

Comstock Homes has partnered with San Jose, California-based SunPower to install its SunTilea solar roof tiles on each of the new residences in the community. The solar tiles look like ordinary tiles so the houses will remain an elegant style.

These homes also incorporate other energy saving features including dual pane low energy windows, high efficiency heating and air conditioning, tankless water heaters, energy efficient lighting and special cool roof tiles. Homes in Villages at Heritage Springs will exceed the national energy standard by 50 percent.

The gated community, including both single-family homes and town homes, is built around a private recreation area with pool, spa, barbecue, picnic area, and playground and basketball court.

In addition to their energy saving features, these homes will have gourmet kitchens with granite counters, luxurious master suites with walk-in closets and many other special attributes that have become the trademark of Comstock Homes.

"This kind of home construction is a win-win situation for everyone," added Ayazi.

"For the developer it adds value to the homes, buyers get a tax rebate and long-term savings on energy, and of course, our environment benefits as well," he said.

The single houses and town homes are priced between 385,000 dollars to 576,000 dollars, with square feet ranking from 1,390 to2,166.

California has prided itself as being a leader in alternative energy innovation. Driving through the hills around Livermore, Palm Springs, or between San Diego and Yuma bring skylines full of wind turbines.

The California Energy Commission claims that wind turbines generated 6,802 gigawatt-hours of electricity -- about 2.3 percent of the state's gross system power.

By the end of 2009 California actually expects to hit nearly 5 percent energy production from renewable sources.

While the wind turbine program has slowed down due to animal rights groups objecting to bird casualties due to propeller strikes, California has not slowed down in its aggressive goals for green energy production.

California's Energy Commission has set a goal of hitting 20 percent by the end of 2010, and 33 percent by the end of 2020.

Meanwhile, the U.S. Congress has set a goal for 20 percent renewable energy production nationwide by 2010.

California's program falls under "The California Energy Commission's New Solar Homes Partnership" (NSHP).

California also offers financial incentives to homebuilders to design energy efficiency and the potential of renewable energy planning into the new home.

Solar energy is one of the most significant personal actions one can take to cut air pollution and greenhouse gas emissions, while helping to conserve precious energy resources for future generations. Plus, it reduces the need for costly new power plants, according to the NSHP.

All California homeowners implementing solar panels in their homes also qualify for the federal tax credits up to 2,000 dollars.

Clear Skies Solar Signs Contract for Installation of $4.8 Million Solar Energy System Microdyne Plastics

Rochester, New York 11/11/2009 12:20 AM GMT (TransWorldNews)

Clear Skies Solar, Inc. (OTCBB:CSKH) has signed a contract to install a $4.8 million 875 kW solar energy system on the roof of the Microdyne building in Colton, Ca. Clear Skies Solar is announcing the approval of the rebate issued on November 2, 2009 from the Colton Electric Utility. The five year rebate/incentive will total about $1,696,000.00 and, along with the 30% federal cash rebate.

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About Clear Skies Solar:

Clear Skies Solar, Inc. (CSS) through its wholly owned subsidiary provides full-service renewable energy solutions to commercial, industrial, and agricultural clients across the country. CSS was incorporated in 2003 and launched formal operations in 2005. During that time period, CSS developed its proprietary systems, obtained licenses and certifications, and acquired technologies that could maximize the impact of its construction expertise on the renewable energy sector. CSS has become one of the premier solar electric installation companies in the country.

Thursday, October 8, 2009

92% of Americans support solar power development, study says

According to the Los Angeles Times this morning

October 7, 2009 | 9:05 pm

The vast majority -- 92% -- of Americans think it’s important for the country to develop and use solar power, according to a study released today, making the alternative energy option potentially one of the most popular things since puppies or ice cream.

The sentiment was echoed almost evenly across political parties, with 89% of Republicans, 94% of Democrats and 93% of Independents agreeing that solar energy is an important aim.

The 2009 Schott Solar Barometer, conducted by independent polling firm Kelton Research, found that 77% of respondents also believe the federal government should make solar power development a national priority. Nearly half are considering solar power options for their home or business, while 70% of those hope to make the switch in the next five years. Only 3% already use the sun for energy.

If, as president of the U.S., they had to choose one energy source to fund, 43% of respondents would chose solar, followed by the 17% who picked wind, the 12% who settled on natural gas and the 10% who selected nuclear.

And yet only 12% of those polled could say that they were extremely informed about solar power while 74% said they wished they knew more about solar power options.

The study, conducted from Aug. 31 to Sept. 8, was commissioned by German photovoltaic company Schott Solar.

-- Tiffany Hsu

Wednesday, September 16, 2009

Solar Panel Companies Face Financial Troubles

Written by James Heiser
Tuesday, 08 September 2009 13:45

Solar TroubleWith the ink barely dry on the resignation letter of self-proclaimed one-time communist Van Jones as President Obama’s Green Jobs Czar, the USA Today is reporting that one area of the “green economy” that is faltering is its virtual mascot: solar power.

According to the USA Today,

Market leaders, including First Solar (FSLR) and SunPower (SPWRA), for instance, are down 12% and 30% this year, even as the benchmark Standard & Poor's 500 index is up 13%. And the Market Vectors Solar Energy ETF, which tracks stocks in the industry, is down 6% this year.

Unlike the big drops in other once-hot stock groups, solar's troubles aren't just caused by speculators rushing out. There are some real problems in the industry behind the sell-off of the stocks.

Environmental alarmists around the world are eagerly awaiting the upcoming UN environmental conference in Copenhagen. If all goes according to plan, the December conference will adopt a substantial expansion of the Kyoto Protocol, with a document perhaps 10 times the length of the 1997 protocol overseeing broad sectors of the economies of the nations of the world — all in the name of saving the environment.

At the same time, why are the companies that make solar power panels suffering such financial difficulties? With the globalists’ cries alternating between the crescendoes of global-warming hysteria and “green economy” hype, how could solar power be in financial trouble? In part, because solar is still not economically competitive and in part because the European government contracts that helped drive the “boom” in the solar industry in recent years are being dramatically curtailed. According to the USA Today:

Thanks to generous programs to encourage green power, European nations have been top buyers of solar modules. However, many are scaling back their subsidies, causing more softness in demand.

Last year, for instance, Spain put a cap on its solar incentive program, causing the demand from a country that accounted for a big piece of the market to shrink 80%, [Nathaniel] Bullard [of New Energy Finance] says. Of even more concern is Germany, the largest solar consumer in the world, which is mulling a cut to incentives to buyers of solar power, [Christine] Hersey [of Wedbush Morgan] says. "Since Germany is the largest market, it sets the tone," she says, adding some solar companies get 60% of revenue from Germany. The subsidies have become unpopular because much of the money is going to Chinese, not German, solar companies, she says.

In short, in the midst of the global economic meltdown, solar power has become a luxury that the Spanish and German governments have decided they can no longer afford. But if the economic costs of “going green” are already leading European powers away from alternative energy, how can they — or the United States — bear the burden of far more sweeping, even fundamental, changes to the global economy as part of the globalists’ agenda at Copenhagen? If “cap and trade” drives the cost of energy to stratospheric levels — and thus simultaneously drives up the cost of every business, and cripples household budgets already strained to their limits because of the on-going economic crisis — the bill will come crashing down on the heads of those people who are barely hanging on right now.

Not only are the cutbacks in European “green energy” programs hurting the solar panel business: the USA Today also cites an attendant glut of solar panels, and the difficulties that companies and consumers are experiencing getting loans as contributing factors weakening the companies producing the panels. The irony is that solar power is now more reasonably priced that it has been: according to the USA Today report, an oversupply of solar panels has cut the cost of home system in half, to around $10,000— a price that consumers should be free to weigh as they determine how best to provide for their energy needs within their household budgets, and as they consider what might happen to their energy bills if “cap and tax” is approved and the successor to the Kyoto Protocol is adopted in December.

Wednesday, June 24, 2009

PA Program helps fund alternative energy projects

Program helps fund alternative energy projects



Pennsylvania homeowners and small business owners seeking to reduce their electric bills through alternative energy projects can find assistance through a new rebate program, state Sen. Wayne D. Fontana said.

The PA Sunshine Solar Program, passed by the General Assembly in 2008 as part of a sweeping energy legislation package, will provide $100 million in rebates to eligible consumers who purchase and install solar energy technology.

Fontana said consumers may be reimbursed up to 35 percent of the purchase and installation costs of solar electric and solar hot water projects. The combined assistance of these rebates and federal tax credits could reduce system costs for consumers by 45 percent.

Several projects are eligible for the rebate, including installation of solar panels that help provide electricity for pumping water, powering communications equipment, lighting homes or businesses, and running appliances. In addition, installing a solar water heating system can produce hot water necessary for washing, cooking, cleaning, and other domestic and commercial uses of hot water.

New Bionamic Concept Car

Bionamic concept car merges solar energy with nanotube super-strength

Bionamic concept car merges solar energy with nanotube super-strength

In a world where our sneaker designs are outpacing our car designs in terms of futuristic style, designer Güney Kol decided to create a concept car that appears to be heavily influenced by the world of sports shoes. Dubbed the Bionamic, the car would be electrically powered and travel the streets covered in carbon/metal nanotube metal alloy.

The car would also be efficiently swathed in a blanket of tiny solar cells allowing it to charge whenever idle during the daytime. Finally, as if the concept car was geeky enough, Kol does away with a steering wheel and instead gives us joysticks to operate the vehicle. Let's hope the big boys of the auto industry are paying close attention.

Via Tuvie

Friday, May 15, 2009

The Solar Tower Is in Operation

This is a very cool way to get power from the sun. I think one day mirrors may be the most efficient means of collecting solar energy on a cheap and massive scale.

MADRID, April 27 (Reuters) - Spanish engineering company Abengoa has begun operating a 20 megawatt solar power plant that is the world’s biggest, using a tower to turn the sun’s rays into electricity and can supply 10,000 homes, it said on Monday. The PS20 plant in the southern province of Seville uses 1,255 mirrors to focus solar radiation at the top of a tower 165 metres high, in order to boil water to drive a turbine and generate electricity.

Of course, you can make your own solar heat collection unit at home to cook food, in a solar oven. The boiled water in a solar tower is just another way to use solar heating and generate electricity from the sun’s free and renewable energy. Photovoltaic cells (solar panels) are not required in this method.

Thursday, May 14, 2009

Monday, May 11, 2009

Green Mountain to BUY Electricity From Solar Customers

Green Mountain Energy Co. announced a program to attract solar energy customers to buy the electricity generated from home arrays at retail rates.

Efficient solar power systems can generate more electricity than a customer can use, the extra electricity flows into the grid. Green Mountain offers customers to sell power to the retailer at the same price that the customers buy the electricity.

If a customer will generate and sell more than 500 kilowatt hours a month to Green Mountain, the company will only pay half the retail price.


The rest of the article is located here : http://bit.ly/HAhPQ

Sunday, May 10, 2009

What is a Home Solar Power System?

Installing a home solar power system in your residence is good for the environment. A typical 10 KW system over the 25 year lifetime eliminates more than 400 pounds of nitrogen oxide which produces smog, eliminates more than 1000 pounds of sulfur dioxide which creates acid rain and eliminates more than 200 tons of carbon dioxide which contributes to global warming. Above all government is giving tax incentives to install home solar power to consumers to reduce carbon footprint.

The Rest of the Article is Located Here : http://bit.ly/qKxs9

How Solar Panels Work

Many individuals, especially those who are newbies in solar technology might wonder how solar panel works. But first, what is a home solar panel? This is a sun-powered gadget that collects and utilizes the energy from the sun via its rays and converting them into power.

Some residents use home solar panel gadgets to act as alternative source of power for their small home appliances, effectively complementing the electricity consumption from the local utility.

The Rest of the Article Can be found here : http://bit.ly/17MeN8

Free Solar Panels ?

If somebody were to offer me a way to power my home with solar energy without paying any money up front, I’d listen.

That somebody is SolarCity. In 2008, SolarCity introduced SolarLease, a program that enables homeowners to lease solar panel systems for a low monthly rate and zero money down. SolarCity even provides free repair service and free monitoring for optimal output as part of the performance guarantee, which lasts as long as the lease. Leases run for 15 years, after which time you can apply your accumulated monthly payments toward purchasing your system or opt to return it back to the company. Along the way, you’ll very likely lower your overall monthly energy costs.


Read the Rest of the Article Here : http://bit.ly/gh3Ws

BHEL to re-enter wind energy biz

Hyderabad, May 10 BHEL has decided to re-enter the wind energy business in a big way this year. The focus would be on equipment manufacture.

The Ranipet unit of the engineering major, which has facilities for wind energy, will re-start the manufacturing activity, according to Mr B.P. Rao, Director (Industrial Systems & Products), BHEL.

BHEL had earlier ventured into setting up wind farms and manufacture in a small way, but issues concerning land acquisition were a major hurdle, he said.

“We are talking with a global energy major for a possible partnership in the wind energy sector,” Mr Rao, who was in Hyderabad recently to participate in a seminar of Plant Engineers told Business Line.


Full Story at http://is.gd/yEr1