US Solar Growth Needs Aussie Efficiency Boost
Competitors are schooling the U.S. by taking a day or less to build a system.
Competitors are schooling the U.S. by taking a day or less to build a system.
California didn’t do it alone.
They’re just more dead weight without proper recycling
Electric vehicles, and their proliferating charging stations, are fast becoming our new transportation normal.
Suddenly, leasing just lost a little more luster.
PACE solar financing has caught the attention of a certain well-connected president.
Resilience is what has propelled solar power to the renewable energy forefront.
Petrochem billionaires Charles and David Koch are spending and lobbying like mad.
The longest day of the year…
Did I mention that Silevo is locally sourced down the street from SunPower in California?
Now it’s renewable energy’s turn to reap the rewards of fancy math.
How about building some offsite shared renewable facilities?
In 2013, policy uncertainty in the United States and parts of Europe helped bring down global investment.
Companies offer investors bonds collateralized by annual property tax assessments, and everyone lets the sunshine in.
The solar war backstory is lame enough to keep short.
Micrqogrids are essential defenses for a dawning age of distributed generation capable of surviving the sudden, expensive superstorms of climate change.
But much of the changes we need will come from customers who can’t get what they want from the grid, concluded Asmus. “Ten years out, microgrids will be an everyday, non-controversial decision.”
State or federal, the plan should be solar, argued SEIA.
Current efforts by utilities to stifle cleantech takeovers of the macrogrid, from solar taxes to worse, are being successfully fought off, as global warming throws ever more challenges in the way.
Microgrids make sense for a world where lighter and cleaner is better. Especially if you want to pack an increasingly powerful punch on a destabilized planet with problems.
A new report from the International Renewable Energy Agency adds more light to the wider global solar boom.
“The question is not if or even when the change will come, but rather, how fast.”
“It does not evaluate mitigation technologies or policies or undertake an analysis of the effectiveness of various approaches.”
National Grid is aiming for over 120 MW of solar and wind generation, but hopefully its renewables adopters won’t be punished with unnecessary tariffs or pulled subsidies for doing the right thing.
Why on earth is anyone thinking about pulling the sunshine plug?
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