December 13, 2006—The US Department of Energy’s (DOE) Office of Energy Efficiency and Renewable Energy (EERE) reports that several coastal states are leading the growth in the US solar power industry.
On the East Coast, EERE says that New Jersey appears to have the most vibrant solar power market, with more than 1,840 solar power installations, including a 454-kilowatt system at Monmouth University that was dedicated in mid-November. New Jersey reportedly more than doubled its solar power capacity in the first nine months of this year. The state credits the growth to its Solar Financing Model, which has cut the payback period for solar power installations to ten years or less.
New York also lays claim to significant solar power projects, reports EERE. The Long Island Power Authority (LIPA), for instance, dedicated the 750th residential solar power system on Long Island in early October. LIPA attributes the growth in solar power to its Clean Energy Incentive rebates, as well as state and federal tax credits.
In addition, Massachusetts is now home to the largest solar power system in New England. A 425-kilowatt system using Schott solar modules was dedicated in Brockton in late October, marking the successful conversion of an empty industrial “brownfield” into an energy-producing “brightfield.” DOE worked on the project with the City of Brockton, which is also home to New England’s first condominium project that is 100 percent solar.
Among California’s recently completed solar power installations is a 1.14-megawatt system installed by PowerLight Corporation in a development in Rohnert Park (north of San Francisco) and a 910-kilowatt system installed by Chevron Energy Solutions on a US Postal System facility in Oakland.
Looking ahead in California, the Los Angeles County Metropolitan Transportation Authority, or Metro, is planning to install a 418-kilowatt system on a maintenance building rooftop, and United Solar Ovonic has supplied 420 kilowatts of thin-film solar laminates to 3rd Rock Systems & Technologies, Inc., which will install them on two California schools.
For more information, see the DOE Web site.