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Sunnyvale group encourages residents to promote solar energy use

By Cody Kraatz, Bay Area News Group / Jan 2, 2008
Source: San Jose Mercury News
http://www.mercurynews.com/localnewsheadlines/ci_7865498?nclick_check=1

A group of residents is trying to put the sun in Sunnyvale and turn the city into a sea of rooftop photovoltaic panels and solar water heaters with a grassroots group-buy program. “The whole purpose for our group is to maximize and accelerate the adoption of solar energy,” said James Tuleya, a Sunnyvale Cool Cities Team leader spearheading the solar program, which is also hosting a series of educational seminars.
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Spire Corporation’s Joint Venture Wins Largest Solar PV Installation for a Manufacturer in Connecticut

Gloria Spire Solar Installing a 308kW Solar System for The Lee Company; One of the Largest Solar Projects in New England
Bedford, Mass., Jan. 7, 2008
Source: Spire Corp. press release
http://phx.corporate-ir.net/phoenix.zhtml?c=76421&p=irol-newsArticle&ID=1092245&highlight=

Gloria Spire Solar, LLC, a joint venture company formed by solar industry leaders Spire Corporation (Nasdaq: SPIR) and Gloria Solar Co., Ltd., today announced that it has won a contract to design and install a 308-kilowatt photovoltaic (PV) solar electric system at The Lee Company’s manufacturing facility in Westbrook, Connecticut. This is the largest solar electric system to be installed for a manufacturing company in Connecticut, and one of the largest in New England.

The system, consisting of 1,760 photovoltaic panels on the roof of the newly constructed facility, is approximately half the size of a football field, covering nearly 29,000 square feet of roof space. At peak power, the system will generate enough electricity to cleanly provide 17 percent of the manufacturing facility’s power consumption. This is equivalent to the power usage of 34 homes for one full year. In addition, this installation will eliminate the emission of 282 tons of carbon dioxide associated with combusting conventional fossil fuels.
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A Solar Grand Plan (Scientific American, Dec. 16, 2007)

By 2050 solar power could end U.S. dependence on foreign oil and slash greenhouse gas emissions
By Ken Zweibel, James Mason and Vasilis Fthenakis
Scientific American Magazine –  December 16, 2007
http://www.sciam.com/article.cfm?id=a-solar-grand-plan&page=1

High prices for gasoline and home heating oil are here to stay. The U.S. is at war in the Middle East at least in part to protect its foreign oil interests. And as China, India and other nations rapidly increase their demand for fossil fuels, future fighting over energy looms large. In the meantime, power plants that burn coal, oil and natural gas, as well as vehicles everywhere, continue to pour millions of tons of pollutants and greenhouse gases into the atmosphere annually, threatening the planet.
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ARISE Technologies Corporation Achieves Second Milestone for Silicon Feedstock Pilot Plant Project

Waterloo, ON, Jan. 7, 2008
Source. Arise Technologies Corp. press release
http://www.arisetech.com/content/view/169/98/

ARISE Technologies Corporation (“ARISE” or the “Company”) (TSX: APV) is pleased to announce that its Silicon Feedstock Mini Pilot Plant is now operational and that polysilicon has successfully been produced in the Silicon Refining Furnace (SiRF(TM: 104.64, +0.70, +0.67%)). The Mini Pilot Plant is located at the Company’s Waterloo facility.
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Victoria firm Carmanah sells off home solar unit

Solar lighting maker to concentrate on large projects
Darron Kloster, CanWest News Service,  January 03, 2008
Source: The Canada.com
http://www.canada.com/vancouversun/news/business/story.html?
id=d7f6b77a-6153-41bb-8c41-bbabca18df17

Two and a half years after getting into the home solar power business, Carmanah Technologies is selling off the unit to its former owner.  The Victoria-based solar lighting manufacturer announced Wednesday it has signed a purchase agreement with David Egles, who will pay $1.5 million for the inventory and various equipment and fittings at the company’s leased facility in Barrie, Ont.
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Solar power: Logan offers incentive for home systems

Salt Lake City Tribune Editorial, Jan 3, 2008
Source: The Salt Lake City Tribune
http://www.sltrib.com/opinion/ci_7875236

Free pollution-free electricity, compliments of the sun! It sounds like an offer you can’t refuse. But who can afford it? While residential solar-energy systems eventually pay for themselves, it takes years, make that decades.  A 1-kilowatt solar-powered system utilizing silicon panels and connected directly to the electrical grid will cost $8,000-$10,000 installed. And despite the hefty investment, it will only reduce your electric bill. A 5-kilowatt system, enough to power the average home, can cost $35,000 or more, a prohibitive sum for most households.

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Hawthorne, Nevada students constructing a solar car

January 7th, 2008 by kalyan89 in PV-General, Solar Installations

By David C. Henley, Publisher Emeritus, January 4, 2008
Source: LahontonValleyNews.com
http://www.lahontanvalleynews.com/article/20080104/Opinion/754277291

Gasoline, natural gas and electricity costs have risen to stratospheric levels. Americans also are showing mounting concern about our dependence on foreign oil and the degrading of the environment.  In desperate efforts to find substitute fuels, scientists are experimenting with alternative sources such as ethanol, hydrogen fuel cells, biodiesel, geothermal, wind power and the sun.
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Boston Hingham schools harness sun’s power – for education

January 7th, 2008 by kalyan89 in PV-General, Solar Energy - general, Solar Installations

By Joan Wilder, Boston Globe Correspondent / December 30, 2007
Surce. Boston.com
http://www.boston.com/news/education/k_12/articles/2007/12/30/
hingham_schools_harness_suns_power___for_education/

As Hingham Middle School science teacher Andrea Stuart fiddles with the software that collects data from the high school’s new solar voltaic roof panels, she sees a simple way to introduce solar power to her students.  “We’re studying photosynthesis,” said Stuart. “We see how plants do this; now we can see how the panels do this – use the sun for fuel.” Seeing how the sun can make electricity is what officials from the town’s lighting plant and schools had in mind when they installed a small array of solar panels on the high school roof in late summer.  (more…)

German company gives Pope gift of solar panels for audience hall

By Carol Glatz, Catholic News Service,
Vatican City, Jan 4, 2008
Source. Catholic News Service
http://www.catholicnews.com/data/stories/cns/0800072.htm

A German solar company has given Pope Benedict XVI something special for Christmas: an electricity-generating solar rooftop for the Vatican’s Paul VI audience hall.  The Bonn-based SolarWorld is donating approximately 2,000 solar modules to be installed on the audience hall roof to provide “the very first solar power ever generated in the Vatican,” said a company press release.
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Valley Transportation Authority to install solar panels at bus station in Almaden Valley

Increased visibility will make it safer for seniors
By Emilie Crofton, Bay Area News Group, Jan 4, 2008
Source: MercuryNews.com
http://www.mercurynews.com/breakingnews/ci_7883859?nclick_check=1

The Valley Transportation Authority’s bright idea to light up bus shelters with solar panels will make waiting for a bus safer for Almaden Valley seniors.   Several residents of Le Mirador senior housing, including Edith Keep and Essie Barador, were concerned with safety issues caused by changes to the bus routes after the approval of the VTA January 2008 Service Plan.  Those changes, as of Jan. 14, will force nearby residents and seniors at Le Mirador Senior Housing to switch from Bus 65 to Bus 64.
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