Solar Cells Info

Your Ad Here

Pagevisits since Nov. 8,2006:

Kohl Dept. Stores announces expansion of solar power programme to the state of Oregon

Source: Trading Markets.com/ August 7, 2008
http://www.tradingmarkets.com/.site/news/Stock%20News/1810520/

Kohl’s Department Stores (NYSE: KSS), a speciality department store, announced on Wednesday (6 August) that the company will expand its solar programme to the state of Oregon in the US.
The company plans to convert four of its nine stores in Oregon, which is reportedly the sixth state under the company’s solar power programme, to solar power. In addition to Oregon, Kohl’s has solar projects underway in California, Connecticut, Maryland, New Jersey and Wisconsin.

Kohl’s said that solar panel installation will begin in August at the Hillsboro store, the first Kohl’s location scheduled for solar power in Oregon. Also, plans are underway to convert three additional Oregon stores to solar power. On average, solar panels will provide about 25% of each store’s energy requirements.  When complete, the four Oregon installations are expected to collectively provide up to 900 kilowatts of power and are expected to produce up to 1 million kilowatt-hours of energy per year.

Akeena Solar’s Flat Roof Solar Solution Will Have San Franciscans Beaming

New Solution Answers the Call for Solar Power for Flat Roof Home and Commercial Buildings
SAN FRANCISCO, CA., July 2, 2008
Source: Akeena Solar press release
http://phx.corporate-ir.net/phoenix.zhtml?c=201840&p=irol-newsArticle&ID=1171457

Akeena Solar, Inc. (Nasdaq:AKNS), one of the United States’ leading designers and installers of solar power systems, today launched its Andalay Flat Roof Solar Power System. Homeowners and businesses now have a sleek, reliable and high-performing solar solution to answer the marketplace demand for flat roof solar power systems.  In urban areas like San Francisco, solar hasn’t been a real option for customers who live in buildings with flat rooftops. When we debuted our innovative Andalay technology eight months ago, it was the first radical change in solar panel design in three decades. Now we are taking that high performance, highly reliable technology one step further and enabling everyone to benefit from solar, regardless of where they live, said Gary Mull, vice president at Akeena Solar. Electricity prices are skyrocketing, and it’s time that every homeowner has access to clean, cheap, renewable energy from the sun. (more…)

Akeena Solar Reaches Coast to Coast With Expansion Into Connecticut

Nation’s Leading Solar Installer Answers the Call in Rapidly Growing Market
LOS GATOS, CA., Aug. 5, 2008
Source: Akeena Solar Inc, press release
http://phx.corporate-ir.net/phoenix.zhtml?c=201840&p=irol-newsArticle&ID=1183725

Responding to consumer demand and a booming residential solar market in New England, Akeena Solar (Nasdaq:AKNS), one of the United States’ leading solar installers, today announced it will expand its operations into Connecticut. The new location at 435 Boston Post Road, Milford, Conn., is the tenth office opened by Akeena Solar.  The company has already completed more than 40 installations in Connecticut, and due to the recent passage of new rebates in Connecticut and rising electricity costs, the demand for Akeena Solar’s award-winning beautifully designed, high performance Andalay panels is rapidly growing. (more…)

Akeena Solar Helps Livermore Achieve 117 kW of Renewable Solar Power

Teams With Pleasanton to Bring Popular Community-Based Solar Adoption Program
LOS GATOS, CA., Aug. 1, 2008
Source: Akeena Solar Inc press release
http://phx.corporate-ir.net/phoenix.zhtml?c=201840&p=irol-newsArticle&ID=1182635

After a successful eight week community program, Akeena Solar (Nasdaq:AKNS), one of the United States’ leading solar installers and a preferred solar Installer for Livermore, today announced nearly 30 new homeowners have signed up to go solar. Together, the systems will generate 117 kW of solar electricity and will offset about 280,753 pounds of carbon dioxide a year — the equivalent of removing 23 cars off the road each year for 30 years. (more…)

Abengoa Solar and Concentrix Solar team up to create Concentrix Iberia

The new company will commercialize FLATCON® concentration technology-based solar power plants.
Sevilla, April 3, 2008
Source: Abengoa Solar press release
http://www.abengoasolar.es/sites/solar/en/noticia9.jsp

Abengoa Solar and Concentrix Solar GmbH have decided to team up, sharing their expertise and leadership, with the creation of Concentrix Iberia. The company has emerged with the aim of commercializing solar power plants based on FLATCON® concentration technology; that is, solar modules with the highest efficiencies on the market.  Concentrix Solar GmbH, a leader in photovoltaic concentration (CPV), was founded in February, 2005 to commercialize the technology for solar energy systems developed by the Fraunhofer Institute of Solar Energy Systems (ISE), in Germany. (more…)

Spanish Abengoa Solar completes financing for new solar projects worth more than €280 million

Fourteen banks are participating in the financing of four new solar projects.
Madid, August 7, 2008
Source: Abengoa Solar press release
http://www.abengoasolar.es/sites/solar/en/noticia12.jsp

Abengoa Solar has completed the financing of the new Solnova 4 Concentrating Solar Power plant and three new photovoltaic plants worth more than €210 million and €70 million respectively. The institutions involved in the financing are Banesto, Caja Madrid, Calyon, Dexia Sabadell, ING, Kfw, Ladesbank, Natixis, Santander, Société Générale and Ubibanca for the construction and start-up of Solnova 4, and La Caixa, Sumitomo and West LB for the photovoltaic plants. (more…)

Ethiopia powers up with solar energy

By David Ehrlich, Cleantech Group Exclusive, August 8, 2008
Source: CleanTech.com
http://media.cleantech.com/3213/ethiopia-powers-solar-energy

Germany’s Solar Energy Foundation aims to improve living conditions and foster a solar industry in Ethiopia.  The rural village of Rema in Ethiopia could become a cleantech boom-town if the work of Germany’s Solar Energy Foundation continues its success in the region. Since 2006, the foundation has installed 2,000 solar systems in Rema and in nearby Rema ena Dire, the biggest solar power project in East Africa. The project has brought power to 5,500 residents in a country where only one percent of people in rural areas have access to electricity. (more…)

150 new Solar Energy systems installed in Waterford County of Ireland

August 11th, 2008 by kalyan89 in PV Industry - Europe, PV-General, Solar Installations

Source: WaterfordToday.IE
http://www.waterford-today.ie/index.php?
option=com_content&task=view&id=3798&Itemid=1&ed=365

Waterford Energy Bureau is delighted to announce that the demand for Solar Water heating has increased significantly in County Waterford. Solar energy is one of the more common sustainable energy technologies and is an alternative to fossil fuel; it is one of the cleanest and safest. That energy from sunlight can be used to produce electricity (Photovoltaic Panels) or directly heat (Solar Water Heating). Considering environment and climate change concerns the Irish government encourage renewable energy solar installations, through grant given by the program Greener Homes Scheme. Under the Greener Homes Scheme Phase I & II over 150 solar water installations in Waterford were completed up to June 2008. (more…)

Massive solar plant proposed in Carbon County, Pennsylvania

By Sandy Bauers, Inquirer Staff Writer, Aug. 8, 2008
Source: The Philadelphia Inquirer
http://www.philly.com/inquirer/health_science/daily/
20080808_Massive_solar_plant_proposed_in_Carbon_County.html

When John F. Curtis III looks at the heart of Pennsylvania’s anthracite country, he doesn’t see a blighted landscape or a heyday long gone.  He envisions the second-largest solar power plant in the nation. Yesterday, Curtis and state officials announced a $65 million solar project on 100 fallow acres in one of Carbon County’s oldest mining towns, Nesquehoning. It would generate 10.6 megawatts of power, enough to increase the state’s current solar output by a factor of 10 and provide electricity for 1,450 households. If he gets the money.

Curtis, who founded the Conshohocken renewable-energy development firm Green Energy Capital Partners in March 2007, acknowledged he had neither all the financing nor a purchasing agreement for the power the facility would produce. Further, the project hinges on Congress’ reauthorizing a federal tax credit of 30 percent for such projects. Curtis said he also needed money from the state’s recently passed $650 million energy independence bill. How residents and companies would get the money has not been decided yet.

But he said he was “confident everything will be financed in short order.” He said purchase orders for 46,000 solar panels – to be mounted on 912 trackers that would follow the sun, east to west – were pending, and he expects to break ground in March. Commercial operation could begin by the end of 2009, he said.

Meanwhile, supporters were jubilant. “Now you have, right in the heart of coal country, the beginning of the solar century,” said John Hanger, president of Citizens for Pennsylvania’s Future, an advocacy group. Hanger also called the project “the fruit” of Gov. Rendell’s recently passed energy policy. “It couldn’t happen at a better time, it couldn’t be a bigger vote of confidence for Pennsylvania’s alternative energy policies,” he said. “This is really big.”

Pennsylvania still has a long way to go to catch New Jersey. Because of the Garden State’s strong rebate program, nearly 3,000 solar installations deliver 54 megawatts of power. Still, Monique Hanis, spokeswoman for the Solar Energy Industries Association, an industry group, confirmed that the Carbon County facility would be the second-largest of its kind in the United States, after the 14-megawatt solar installation at Nellis Air Force Base near Las Vegas.

State Rep. Keith R. McCall (D., Carbon) said the facility would bring 50 jobs to the area. More than that, “to think that we’re still sitting on probably 300 to 500 years of coal reserves . . . it just shows that we’re trying to be innovative.” The culture decades ago was one of coal-baron millionaires and miners who died from what their widows called “the black lung.”

“The legacy of coal was one that when they left, they left the scarred landscape behind as well,” McCall said. “It was difficult to get anybody to take a second look at Carbon County.” “The reality is, we are putting the nuts and bolts together on the [state’s] entire energy package, but that will come to fruition,” McCall said. “Just a commitment letter from the governor would suffice for the company to get the proper financing to make this thing work.” The property is owned by Kovatch Enterprises, which builds fire trucks and emergency vehicles and is Carbon County’s largest employer.

Though Pennsylvania is hardly the sunniest spot in the nation, its “renewable portfolio standards” make it attractive for solar, wind and other renewable energies. The standards require utilities to generate or buy a percentage of their power from renewable sources – equal to 850 megawatts by 2021. “What we’re doing fits hand in glove with the requirements,” said Curtis, who has 20 years of experience in medical and information technology marketing and who recently was Eastern U.S. development manager for UPC Solar of Chicago.

Analysts say 850 megawatts cannot be met by rooftop installations on homes and small business, and the trend has been toward utility-scale projects. A 1.4-megawatt facility is planned for the former Philadelphia Navy Yard, and a 3-megawatt facility is under construction in Falls Township next to the GROWS landfill.

Solar Power Hits Home

By Bryan Walsh, Time, Aug. 07, 2008
Source: Time.com
http://www.time.com/time/magazine/article/0,9171,1830386,00.html

There were limits to how green Bruce Letvin was willing to go. For years, the 53-year-old anatomy professor had wanted to install solar panels on his Manhattan Beach, Calif., home. But the up-front installation costs always outweighed the benefits for the environment and his conscience. This spring, however, he managed to work out green financing with the help of solar company SunPower. After determining that his electricity bills and roof exposure were large enough to make him a good candidate for its solar panels, the company, based in San Jose, Calif., helped him find a 15-year loan for the $64,500 system. Yes, his $550 loan payment is more than the $300 or so he used to spend each month on electricity bills–so far, he has generated enough solar power that he doesn’t need to take any juice from the grid–but after he pays off the loan, his power will be free. And this year, he’ll get a $16,000 rebate in the form of federal and state tax incentives for solar. “I really wouldn’t have been able to do this without the financing,” he says. “But with [the loan], it’s a no-brainer.” (more…)

« Previous ArticleNext Article »