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Benefits Of Solar Energy
FAYETTEVILLE, NC (AP) - Surrounded by a cornfield and trees sits one of the
state’s
newer power plants.
There are no telltale signs of a power plant - no long lines of railroad
cars filled with coal, no cooling towers releasing steam clouds, no smokestacks
or big transformers.
As the sun grows the corn, it also makes power on the roof of a metal building
- anywhere from 150 to 750 kilowatt hours per day, or enough to meet the needs
of 15 typical houses.
The Fayetteville Observer reported that the solar power plant at the Hamlin
Cos.’ shop
near Benson, which makes duct work, is a sign of what may come. The 107,000-watt
system is among the largest in the state but will soon be eclipsed by even
bigger systems.
Solar energy, proponents say, is on the cusp of a big wave. They are optimistic
because: the solar-energy industry is no longer in its infancy. The technology,
and those who install it, have made great strides with more efficient systems
and more professional installers.
Solar energy makes sense for environmental and economic reasons, experts
say. A solar water heater system can cut residential utility bills by as much
as
30 percent.
North Carolina’s legislators are pushing renewal energy. By 2021, utilities
must get 12.5 percent of customers’ power needs from renewal energy such
as solar power or through energy efficiencies.
The potential of solar power is affecting all segments of the market - from
energy giant Duke Power to small companies in Fayetteville.
In June, Duke Power announced plans to install up to 850 solar panels throughout
North Carolina at a cost of $100 million. Homes, schools, stores and factories
will get solar panels. The idea is to produce power where it is used, rather
than at large plants.
Duke is also partnering with SunEdison on a solar farm in Davidson County.
The proposed 16-megawatt facility would be the largest photovoltaic solar facility
in the country. SunEdison hopes to be operational by late 2010. All of the
electricity
generated would go to Duke. The solar panels would supply enough energy to
meet the demands of 2,600 homes.
Progress Energy Carolina and SunPower Corp. are developing a 1-megawatt solar
farm in Cary.
The DuPont plant in northern Bladen County makes components used in about
40 percent of solar panels produced annually, said Steve Kalland of the North
Carolina Solar Center. The center is part of N.C. State University and is the
state’s
clearinghouse for renewable energy programs and research.
Sencera International Corp. announced it will invest $36.8 million to build
a solar-module factory in Mecklenburg County. The state gave the company $62,000
from the One North Carolina Fund and $100,000 from the state’s Green
Business fund. Charlotte and Mecklenburg County will give Sencera about $1
million over
three years - equal to 90 percent of what the company will pay in property
taxes during that time - to satisfy the local match requirements of the Green
Fund
grant.
It’s not a roofing accessory,” said William Hamlin, the executive
vice president of Hamlin Energy Solutions. “This is a power plant on someone’s
roof.”
In March, the company installed 24,000 square feet of photovoltaic strips
on the roof of the Benson plant. The panels are connected so that if one panel
goes out, the remaining panels continue to work.
The panels have semi-conductors that turn sunlight into power. Peak production
is between 11 am and 3 pm.
Inverters convert the electricity to alternating current. The output immediately
goes to a transformer owned by South River Electric Membership Corp.
The solar panels provide about 30 percent of the shop’s needs.
The company uses the roof for both training and demonstrations. Most of all,
Hamlin said, they try to show potential customers that solar energy is “clean,
simple and safe.”
Alternative Energy Concepts of Fayetteville is another company that spun
into the business.
When the owners of Intelect Inc. - an electrical contractor in Fayetteville
- looked into solar, they also decided they needed their own separate company.
They formed Alternative Energy Concepts.
“
We knew electrical work - there was no mystery there,” said Joseph Sheffield
of Alternative Energy Concepts.
But there was a learning curve in understanding solar, he said. The inquiries
have been nonstop since the company opened several months ago. It can install
solar, wind or hydroelectric systems.
Some of the interest has been in installing solar hot water heating systems.
During the mid-1970s, such systems were popular but bulky and not always reliable.
Today’s technology still uses large panels that are 4 feet by 8 feet.
But they are more efficient. Distilled water circulating through the panels
heats
up, then runs through a control panel. Water from a hot-water heater also flows
through the control panel.
The systems are separate, but the heat is transferred. That decreases the
need for the water heater’s electrical element.
Fayetteville lawyer Graham Gurnee and his wife, Elizabeth, consulted the
book “Solar
Energy For Dummies” when they considered installing a system.
They decided to install a system at their home. Elizabeth Gurnee said the
foremost reason was environmental. The second was economic; with federal and
state tax
credits, their system will pay for itself in about four years.
Tax credits can pay for as much as 65 percent of a solar-energy system. The
credits are needed, said Kalland of the North Carolina Solar Center, to offset
the high
cost. But the costs are coming down, and Kalland predicts by 2020 the cost
of producing solar power should be about the same as conventional electricity.
Kalland does not expect solar to supplant conventional plants. He noted that
today’s largest solar plant produces about 20 megawatts of power. In
comparison, the average conventional coal plant produces 800 megawatts daily.
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