Showing posts with label solar. Show all posts
Showing posts with label solar. Show all posts

Tuesday, October 26, 2010

Feds approve largest-ever solar project in California

Solar electric generating station at Kramer Junction, San Bernardino Country, California.  Photo by David Nunuk.

Yesterday (October 25th), the Associated Press announced that the Obama administration has approved a thousand-megawatt solar project on federal land in southern California, the largest solar project ever planned on U.S. public lands. See full story here.

Interior Secretary Ken Salazar hailed the $6 billion Blythe Solar Power Project, to be built in the Mojave Desert near Blythe, Calif., as the start of a boom in solar power on federal lands.
"Today is a day that makes me excited about the nation's future," Salazar said Monday at a news conference. "This project shows in a real way how harnessing our own renewable resources can create good jobs here at home."
The Blythe project, being developed by Solar Millennium, a German solar developer, is slated for more than 7,000 acres of public land near the Arizona border, some 225 miles east of Los Angeles.
The project is the sixth solar power development approved by the Interior Department this month — all in California and Nevada. Approval of a seventh project — also in California — is expected in the next few weeks. All could start transmitting electricity by the end of 2011 or early 2012.
At full capacity, the seven projects would generate more than 3,000 megawatts of power and provide electricity for up to 2 million homes. The projects are expected to create more than 2,000 jobs during construction and several hundred permanent jobs.
Of course these projects on federal lands are not without problems, as described in the article, but this is a step in the right direction, in my opinion.

Astrid

Friday, October 22, 2010

Ann Arbor Home Becomes Oldest Home in America to Be "net zero"


Ann Arbor.com ran a story today about Matt Grocoff's home and solar panel installation.

This week, a state-of-the-art solar panel system was installed on the roof of Matt Grocoff's historic home on Ann Arbor's Old West Side. The installation was a major step in the process to make Grocoff's home, according to his research, the oldest house in the United States to be "net zero," meaning it will produce more energy than it uses.
Astrid

Wednesday, September 15, 2010

Matt Grocoff's Net Zero Ann Arbor House Quest

Matt and Kelly Grocoff - Ann Arbor News 2008
Matt and Kelly Grocoff are renovating their 110 year-old Ann Arbor victorian house to net-zero energy, water, and waste.  See his blog here http://www.concentratemedia.com/blogs/bloggers/MattGrocoff0099.aspx

Here's a link to the 2008 article from the Ann Arbor News with details of their bathroom renovation
plus all the other upgrades to their house  http://www.mlive.com/environment/index.ssf/2008/04/earth_day_ann_arbor_couple_fin.html

Astrid