Thursday, September 10, 2009
My Interview with The Business Ledger
Sunday, September 6, 2009
One Solar Picture Requires 1,000 Words (Less I Hope)
My concern is that readers will see those two panels and think that's all it will take to power a house, though I will be amused if they connect the two panels with the $20,000 and up price tag (before incentives) for systems that will provide a good chunk of your electricity.
So, a few comments on the graphic that may sound like nitpicking, but generating solar electric power is still a relatively rare deal in Illinois.
First of all, those are solar electric (photovoltaic) panels, not solar thermal panels. Hopefully in a few years, when solar panels in Illinois are as ubiquitous as Cub pennant drive collapses, I won't have to sound so elementary.
Those two panels are about 200 watts or so of capacity measuring about 16 square feet of area in total. In Chicago, they would generate about 300 kilowatt-hours (kWh)or so a year. The average house in Chicago uses about 7,600 kWh a year. Some might say, well, in the future research will improve the technology so that two panels that size will deliver that much electricity. Sorry, even if the panels were 100% efficient (a little tough to do), the most you would get is about 2,500 kWh a year. The best theoretical case in the foreseeable future is about 40% and I wouldn't hold my breath getting those from your home improvement store anytime soon. Yes, you can use reflectors and concentrators, but that's still way more area than 16 square feet of those panels.
Those two panels are either 12 or 24 volts each, which isn't sufficient to provide household voltage, a nominal 120 volts. Without getting into a design course here, you would need at least ten 12 volt panels or five 24 volt panels. Or, you could use the panels off grid for a small application like direct current fans. I have one on my house, a PV panel directly connected to a roof vent fan - when it's sunny, it vents, cloudy or dark, it doesn't. Or, you could use a transformer to step up the voltage, but that could get messy. Or, you could use batteries, but that could get messier for the average homeowner. To paraphrase "Apocalypse Now", 'I love the feel of battery acid on my hands in the morning'.
Anyway, what you'll probably need is at least 100 square feet or so panels, which will be about 1,000 watts or so capacity and cost around $8-12,000, depending on how good a shopper you are and how easy the installation is. That's sort of a starter application for a grid connected home, that will get you 1,200 to 1,500 kWh hrs a year. You can knock off 30% from federal tax credits, and if Illinois gets the rebates back, maybe another 25-30%. The more you add, the more electricity you generate, and you'll get some cost savings from economy of scale. Expensive? You can spend thirty to fifty grand redoing your kitchen or have no electric bill. Up to you.
One more thing, the suggestion made about using the panels to shade windows from the sun is a good idea, but the angle show is way too steep, more appropriate for a solar thermal panel.
Want to know more? The Illinois Solar Tour is coming up Saturday, October 3 (in most places), 10 AM - 3 PM. Check out the Illinois Solar Energy Association website at http://www.illinoissolar.org to find 140 buildings getting some or all of their power or heat from the sun, wind and earth. See them for yourself. There's bound to be a building or two near you.
Thursday, August 27, 2009
Welcome to the Sun and Wind Progress Report Blog
Some more background on me. I run a consulting business, of which my programming with WCPT (“Sun and Wind Progress Report” and “Mighty House’s” ‘Sunday Sunnies’) is part, as well as President of the Illinois Solar Energy Association in my copious free time. My goal is to paint a picture of encouragement of the renewable energy scene in Illinois. Some of my viewpoints toward that include the following, which I will be expanding upon in upcoming posts:
- ---Renewable energy, along with energy efficiency, modern energy storage and advanced infrastructure (also known as “smart grids) will eventually succeed the incumbent system. Centralized command and control power plants and the antiquated grids that send electricity will go the way of the battleship after Pearl Harbor. But it will take decades to happen.
- ---There is no one way or magic bullet that will accomplish this goal. Renewable energy involves a PORTFOLIO, ecosystems of different applications in different sizes in a distributed manner. I believe that no single renewable energy technology will dominate, no single type of technology will dominate and no single business model will dominate. When I am asked for my advice on what works best, the response I often give is a maddening “it depends”.
- ---Renewable energy will never be a “perfect” technology, but neither is anything else. There will always be room for improvement and innovation like anything else. Waiting for solar or wind technology to be “perfected” is like waiting for the perfect toothpaste, cell phone, car, or for the Cubs to win the World Series.
- ---In a reverse nod to Shakespeare’s Mark Anthony, I come to praise renewable energy, not bury anything else. A critique on how renewable energy works is not automatically bad mouthing or attacking anything else. My intent is to be positive and I expect my audience to be the same.
Looking forward to the experience,
Mark Burger
Monday, August 24, 2009
Feds Approve Illinois Stimulus Package - Applications for Solar and Wind Power Programs Issued
The US Department of Energy has approved funding for Illinois' State Energy Program under the 2009 American Recovery and Reinvestment Act of 2009 (ARRA). The state's Department of Commerce and Economic Opportunity's (ILDCEO) Energy and Recycling Bureau has issued a series of funding opportunities under the Illinois Energy Plan. Two of the elements that concern solar and wind power installations are the Renewable Energy Production Program and the Community Renewable Energy Program. The applications for both programs may be found on on the ILDCEO page at http://www.illinoisbiz.biz/dceo/Bureaus/Energy_Recycling/Economic+Stimulus/Illinois+Energy+Plan.htm, and are due October 26, 2009. There are also funding opportunities for Green Industries and Biofuels, also to be found on the same page.