Posts tagged solar panels

You Too Can Live in a SolarCity

The goal is oil independence.  We all know that Julia Roberts has a solar installation on her roof, but what if Joe the Plumber wants to go green too.  Lyndon and Pete Rive decided that the residential sector, regulars like you and me, deserved the opportunity to join the green movement!   We the people haven”t had easy access to solar instillation in the past but we do now.   The two brothers have worked hard at making the entire process as simple and cost effective as possible.  Ever since Energy Independence Day, July 4th, 2006, when SolarCity launched, they have helped regular consumers and small commercial areas, go solar by streamlining the process from desire to delivery.  Questions about the tax breaks or the changing tariff situation?  No worries, SolarCity experts have it all covered, from financing, design, instillation and monitoring, they do it all for you!

The company itself definitely gets personal kudos and an endorsement from me.  It takes vision to perceive that the media landscape is changing and any member of the bloggosphere can attest to the difficulty in getting access to targets.  But with a decidedly open door policy,  Jonathan Bass, Director of Communications at Solar City spent a full fifteen minutes or more with me (new blood in the San Francisco area, blogger extraordinaire) answering my questions and explaining to me how SolarCity went from birth to the number one solar energy procurement company in the state of California in a year!

I needed to know how the company was organizing the community around solar energy.  Great ideas need to be shared and as I’ve mentioned before, a cohesive team moves a project along quickly.  Community organizing began with their aptly named “community program,” where geographic groups came together to Go Solar, obviously lowering costs with some collective leveraging.  Mountain View went first and now Marin County has a group contract with SolarCity.  The original concept of geographic community involvement evolved and now CitySolar partnered with the nonprofit, community advocacy group 1BOG (1 block off the grid), who will reach out to more residential communities pushing a move towards renewable energy.

Can I go solar?  Yup!  SolarCity has introduced some fantastic options to make solar energy more accessible to everyone.   With different financing, their most recent addition is a solar lease program.   So like your sweet Red Civic, you can lease your solar panel instillation and save money on your monthly energy bill at the same time- no giant up front costs involved at all.

Looking for energy on the cheap?  There’s a new gizmo that allows solar homes to monitor energy production and usage through graphs on the internet!  Right on your computer you can determine if you’re using lots of power at 3pm or 6 or whenever.  After figuring out why, maybe you can reduce your draw a little with some life changes.  The visual indicator enables recognition and change of energy usage habits, lowering costs even more!

Sales people, we all know, are on the front lines of any business’ development and growth (even if you have a great product, if no one buys it, no profit).  Daniel Bacon, a sales manager with three years experience, took some time to speak to me about the sales process.  He knows what’s up, if you have questions, definitely ask him.  He gets my vote: 888 765 2489 (ask for Dan, tell him the blogger sent you).

Got some time on your hands? Join the SolarCity!  Serious guys, the company’s coming to your state this year (well, 10 more states in addition to CA, AZ and the Portland area).  Look them up.  They’ve got renewable energy down.  And you can get a solar system up whenever you want.  Just call and find out how.

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Solar Panels Fly

The new billionaire must have- the Hy-Bird.  Made in France.  It’s a beautiful solar paneled airplane for adventuring!
I believe we’re all adults here and can handle reading French.  Just try,  you’ll get through it.
Beautifully designed web presence.

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Citywide Solar Growing

Just as I predicted, the Berkeley/Connecticut model of city-sponsored infrastructure development is spreading out from its point of origin to other neighbourhoods.  Thank goodness, it’s a great idea.

New Hartford, Connecticut has agreed to purchase 20% of its energy needs via renewable methods by 2010.

Also the town of Pomfret in Connecticut.  Anyone seeing a Connecticut connection?  For more on Connecticut’s solar crusade check out this link to the Connecticut Clean Energy Fund.

It begins.  I’ve decided that I’m going to wager on the fact that solar energy is going to change American consumption habits before the Volt goes into production on a large enough scale to change American driving habits.  How do you like them apples GM?

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Berkeley Goes Solar FIRST

The headline says it all:  “Berkeley Going Solar-city pays upfront, recoups over 20 years.”  Brilliant piece of work there.  Let’s discuss the brilliance:

First, congrats to the government for doing something useful, I didn’t believe that was even possible.  The city of Berkeley made a goal of reducing it’s greenhouse gas emissions by 80% by 2050 and they are on their way to actualizing success.  (We’re all hopeful that the planet will still be functional in 2050.)  I was thrilled when the government began contemplating creating the goal in the first place.  This is quite a few steps forward in the process.  They’ve mapped out a way to make it happen.   The city’s going solar, they’re helping to pay for it, Berkeley’s about to get a makeover.

How many people said that solar energy is a great idea but it’s just too expensive?  You who raged about the distance of price parity and the prohibitive upfront expense of solar panels.  You doubting Thomas blog posters who fired up the debate, or took the opposition stance to the possibility of going solar.  Berkeley’s taking a $tand- instead of letting the market take care of this extreme enviropolitical structural change, the city’s financial influence will determine outcome and make it a reality- now.  Looks like Berkeley will be the first of Bush’s smurf blue step children to wise up, take action, make change, and Obama hasn’t even taken office yet.

The state of California pledged to reduce its greenhouse gas emissions by 25% by 2020.   If people still inhabit the earth, two pieces of legislation including the California Solar Initiative and the Million Solar Roofs program provide a framework for the coming changes in the state.  The Berkeley FIRST program, the city’s Financing Initiative for Renewable and Solar Technology, will provide funding for a solar panel instillation on household roofs, yours and mine, from a bond or loan fund which will return within 20 years via an adjustment to property tax bills.  The pilot Berkeley FIRST project commenced this summer, 2008.  GREAT news!  American money improving America- what a concept.  (I’d love to hear some reviews from the locals, but more on that later.)

The lack of awareness on this fantastic step in Operation A Better America is due to the distraction of the current election.  My advice for undecideds: Just ask Ken Alex, the California deputy attorney and Berkeley’s Mayor Tom Bates who they are endorsing for President and vote with them.   Those two gentlemen and their teams have enabled the first American structural makeover since all of America’s money got spent blowing things up in Iraq.  Adding solar panels to improve a city in California instead of decimating cities in Afghanistan, or Iraq, is such a fantastically justifiable expense.  With a blown American budget, the American people, myself included, would like to see the action potential of those trillions of dollars that we don’t have that are being spent anyway.

I know what the Red Ones will think, conspicuous government spending, followed by a mighty hand wringing.  Perhaps since money will be spent domestically and we will see the results visually and in a manipulation of the domestic expense matrix, the Bigtime-Haves are going to have to start getting used to hanging with the Haven’t-Had-as-Much-Recently group.  Solar panels:  Call it the first American shopping spree!  Like buying a new outfit.

While the ugly duckling phases makes Berkeley the nearly hot new kid on the block, very shortly, the popular kids will take notice in a big way.   San Francisco, Santa Cruz, hoity toity Santa Monica among other state agencies have already looked into the Berkeley process.  If it goes, it’ll get copied.  By stealing the best working ideas, which include putting solar panels on rooftops, the yellow tinge that hovers just above our heads in LA might just being to break up before I’m dead.  (Yes, I KNOW it’s better than it was 20 years ago.  I lived in Canada, the sky is always beautiful except for Toronto.  The bling hanging in the LA sky is, will be, and always has been completely disgusting.  There can be no arguement.  Make it go away. That, and nothing less, should be the goal.)

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Solar Panels Get Greener, and Cheaper!

Great news from Sept 29th, BioSolar announced its top secret sustainably developed solar panel!

All solar panels have a backsheet for protective covering on the back part of the panel.  It’s usually made from some sort of petroleum-based substance.  BioSolar’s fantastic solar panels use a combination of cellulose based material from cotton and arcane nylon 11 derived from castor beans.

That’s a nice kick in the pants for oil! (Take it!)

I’m totally excited and needed to share.

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solar 2

No doubt, solar energy’s perpetually renewable potential ranks high on the alternative energy NOW posibilities list. I quote Maharishi Solar’s slogan: Trusting the Sun for over 4 Billion Years.  

With the groundbreaking California Solar Initiative endorsing the Million Solar Roofs Program, the idea to get one million solar installations on rooftops of businesses, residences, and non-profit organizations by 2010 could potentially impact the general overall American exposure to solar possibiliites.  Split into two funds, one for new developments and the other for changing establishments into solar energy power house.  By adding solar components to existing infrastructure involves slapping grid-tied solar panel installations on all of the already built rooftops in America.  What an environmentally friendly and potentially lucrative model of existence. 

If America ever does anything right, the country will mimic Germany.  The European solar energy leader created solar energy incentives through an established solar loan system, tax breaks and by enabling solar energy users to sell back their extra unused energy to the utility- for profit. Yes, it’s actually happening, right now, on a different continent.  We should either be ashamed of ourselves or proactive.  It’s an organizing challenge to just admit we’re way behind and catch up.  Now.  Germany’s been the leader since the Big Bang of solar energy- 2004.  It begins by walking into a bank and filling out any of the pre-writen solar loan forms.  They’re common, people know they’re there.

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