http://www.wral.com/business/story/4158301/Other than just being glad for the energy step, I'm excited about this b/c two of my friends work for SPC and they've been working really hard on this these past few months. Yay solar!
12/17/2008 4:01:25 PM
You can grow solars?
12/17/2008 4:08:27 PM
!
12/17/2008 4:13:02 PM
^^ by definition, everything that grows is solar powered
12/17/2008 4:24:48 PM
Presuming it is in the vacinity of a sun.
12/17/2008 4:27:03 PM
Only 899 more of those, and you'll have a nuclear plant's worth of electrical power, assuming you're producing 1 MW all the time. If you're only producing 20% of the time, it's a mere 1618 more, with appropriate battery storage. If you can get people to build these, then it would be a great time for you graduating engineers to get in to the solar business.
12/17/2008 4:31:54 PM
ding ding dingcompletely worthless for base loadit is just a way to make people feel good
12/17/2008 4:34:07 PM
12/17/2008 4:52:08 PM
12/17/2008 5:04:32 PM
The efficiency of the solar panels definitely has to be improved. Currently, they might be useful to reduce peak demand during summer months, especially if encourage people to put them on roofs of houses and buildings. They might be useful to put in at old industrial sites that cannot otherwise easily be reclaimed.
12/17/2008 5:16:41 PM
12/17/2008 5:20:40 PM
i thought they had to buy it at the same rate they sell it
12/17/2008 6:45:08 PM
^i havent kept up with it but I didn't think that was the case
12/17/2008 7:56:19 PM
12/17/2008 8:28:47 PM
Yup, we need more nuclear energy. It's safe, clean, efficient, and cheap. Solar is nice for personal use, but for our real needs nuclear is the way to go. Solar is, I think, probably another couple of decades away from any reasonable usefulness anyway. I'd prefer it if people were talking about building wind farms.
12/17/2008 8:54:57 PM
12/17/2008 9:58:03 PM
12/17/2008 11:00:43 PM
12/18/2008 12:10:58 AM
12/18/2008 8:41:16 AM
12/18/2008 8:55:02 AM
12/18/2008 9:04:32 AM
Its not economically viable, but the more things like these are adapted the more we can learn and advance the technology (and lower the price).Just the same, none of this stuff can touch nuclear power with a 10 ft pole. Nuclear FTW!
12/18/2008 9:05:16 AM
12/18/2008 9:08:04 AM
the environmental impact of all those cells is probably worse per kw/hr than a emissions reclaiming coal plant.first thing that needs to be done is to eliminate mercury emissions. second is require that coal plants sequester their co2 emissions in some form, (bio-plants, underground, etc)third more nuclear power (updated designs, additional cores at existing facilities and new plants)fourth improve nuclear fuel processing/reprocessing (pyro-metalurgical process to reclaim fuel and seperate out fission products and contaminating wastes, this will reduce the long term danger of the wastes and make them useless for weapons) this process will also allow us to reduce the amount of uranium mined and refined.fifth privately mounted solar (on houses, building skins etc) to maximize currently under utilized resource.sixth offshore wind and tidal power development.
12/18/2008 12:27:56 PM
12/18/2008 12:38:09 PM
^^^"avoided rate"[Edited on December 18, 2008 at 12:46 PM. Reason : ]
12/18/2008 12:41:28 PM
DIA (Denver Airport) has a 3megawatt facility capable of powering 228 homesIMHO, the airports should all do this.smartgrid is where it's at:http://www.businessgreen.com/business-green/news/2231633/utility-planning-huge-smartlet's try reducing the amount of energy we produce instead of trying to come up with how to create more clean energy first, although both help[Edited on December 18, 2008 at 1:48 PM. Reason : .]
12/18/2008 1:42:18 PM
Duke Energy is starting up smartgrid stuff soon too. Maybe we'll see it around here some day...
12/18/2008 1:48:33 PM
12/18/2008 4:02:14 PM
12/18/2008 4:05:11 PM
what, do you think they stop generating electricity at 2:00PM in the summertime? Have you never heard of solar thermal collectors? Solar panels are perfect for summer peaks, regardless of your opinion.[Edited on December 18, 2008 at 4:15 PM. Reason : my point still stands that the only reason to build a solar farm is for the RECs scam.]
12/18/2008 4:12:26 PM
^^ just like the mass effect on building materials causes the peak load to be later than most people think, solar panels are not limited to producing power at the same instant they are receiving direct sun.
12/18/2008 4:21:48 PM
dur, that's what the molten salt is for but i think he's prolly talking about good ole pv panels
12/18/2008 4:37:32 PM
^ yes, im talking about pv
12/18/2008 4:53:10 PM
Damn, that's piss poor.5 acres powers only 100 houses? Only uses 16-20% of the day??Call me when they come up with a feasible technological improvement
12/18/2008 6:39:44 PM
they don't cash flow even if you break up the plants into separate installations (like four quadrants on a roof) to max out the 65% tax credit with a 100% sell back agreement and use of all the depreciationyou have to do it because you really want to, it's still a net negative on the economic front - if prices come down another 40% or the utilities start paying 2x as much for power you'll see solar everywhereedit: they do make money after about 15 years[Edited on December 18, 2008 at 9:28 PM. Reason : diosjo]
12/18/2008 9:27:59 PM
that economic analysis became obsolete when states started instituting mandates on what percentages of green energy had to come from locally produced solar systems. RECs are currently selling for upwards of $500 per certificate in New Jersey, and forecasters are predicting the same thing to happen here and several other states.[Edited on December 18, 2008 at 9:46 PM. Reason : they pay for themselves much quicker at $500/MWh plus utility reimbursement]
12/18/2008 9:44:03 PM
http://www.njcleanenergy.com/renewable-energy/programs/solar-renewable-energy-certificates-srec/pricing/pricingapparently RECs have continued to escalate in New Jersey and have gotten as high as $600 two months ago.
12/18/2008 9:49:50 PM
^^its amazing that nobody has a problem with the government controlling more and more of our lives. could be the greatest tragedy of the early 21st century.
12/18/2008 10:03:06 PM
TBOONE
12/19/2008 7:08:23 PM
12/19/2008 7:35:47 PM
12/20/2008 12:22:02 AM
MONO RAIL!!!
12/21/2008 10:43:23 AM
I'm pretty sure Dr. Goodnight did this as an altruistic gesture to further develop solar power and reduce cost in the future, and wasn't too concerned about making money. So GJ Dr. G!
12/21/2008 11:33:03 AM
What about the animals and plants that were displaced to put in horribly cost ineffective solar panels. Nuclear is the only viable current solution that we have. Solar/wind is only wasting tax payer $$$ and land at this point.
12/22/2008 12:07:09 AM
LOL SOLAR AND WIND ARE WORTHLESS BECAUSE MY NUCLEAR SCIENCE PROFFESSOR TOLD ME SO
12/22/2008 3:03:14 AM
http://web.mit.edu/newsoffice/2008/oxygen-0731.htmlCool solution to store energy at night. Makes solar much more of a viable option. Anyway the company i worked for in Charlotte this past summer just installed an 8kw solar array on their roof with a reasonable payback of a few years. During parts of the year the office can be run entirely on solar energy. I know 8kwatts is low but it's a start. There's nothing else on the roof, so why not?
12/22/2008 3:39:09 AM
Proliferation of batteries is a bad thing.
12/22/2008 6:49:41 AM
Here at work my company has been bidding a new building going up at SAS. They have solar thermal collectors on the roof which can be used to maintain the building's hot water supply instead of having to rely on the 2 gas fired water heaters also in the building.However this building also calls for thermal floor heating on the ground floor lobby as well as snow melting sidewalks out front. Both of those items seem highly frivilous and unnecessary uses of energy.
12/22/2008 11:05:42 AM
The real waste would be to not have snow melting sidewalks.
12/22/2008 11:09:00 AM