Wednesday, July 16, 2014

Fun in the Sun at NW SolarFest!

11th Annual NW SolarFest: Renewable Energy & Sustainable Living Fair

Shoreline, WA (July 2014) – On Saturday, July 26th at Shoreline Community College from 10am to 5 pm head to NW SolarFest to learn about and celebrate renewable energy and sustainable living. You'll find fun activities such as:

·         KIDZone; music circle, drumming, yoga, art & craft activities, take an energy pledge and get a mini solar car (first 300 kids get their own for free), Bubbleman (noon), Professor Phillip Photon (1pm), Solar Powered Kidz Rock Concert (4pm)

·         NW EcoBuilding workshops, hourly from 11am-4pm

·         Seattle City Light Solar Powered “Green Up” speaker and music stage featuring sounds from The Hollers, the Highlife Band, and Ayron Jones (noon-2)

·         Trash Fashion Show where dogs will model fashionable outfits created from recycled garbage sponsored by ShoreDOG (2pm)      

·         Barter Fair, bring your home grown or homemade items to trade (2-4pm)

·         “Momenta” documentary film screening about coal exports in the Pacific Northwest (2:30pm)

·         Urban County Fair: Sustainability displays and competition – Backyard Floral Arrangement, Container Garden, Restyled Clothing/Wearables, Recycle/Upcycle Idea, Food Art

·         Enter to win Little Library

·         Transportation Zone features 100% electric vehicles; Nissan Leaf and Tesla S Model

·         Exhibits, Presentations, Urban Farm, Transportation Zone, Solar Cooking Demonstrations, Live Music, and Food.

           
NW SolarFest is an outdoor annual regional event supported by the City of Shoreline, Shoreline Community College, Seattle City Light, and many others and is organized by Shoreline Solar Project. The free event will run from 10 am to 5 pm at Shoreline Community College, 16101 Greenwood Avenue North.

Metro Route 5, 331 and 345 serve the college on Saturdays.


More information is available at www.shorelinesolar.org

Tuesday, July 15, 2014

Itek Breaks Record!

June was a Record Breaking Month for Itek! 

The busy Itek crew built and shipped over 1 megawatt of locally built solar modules in June!  They celebrated with root beer floats and lunch and got ready to break the record again in July.  They opened the month by starting the night shift and are on track to build over 15 megawatts within the next year!

Congratulations Itek!   




Saturday, July 12, 2014

PSE Customers Could Save $10 Million Annually After Judge's Ruling

Puget Sound Energy customers could save as much as $10 million per year after a Thurston County judge reversed part of the Bellevue-based company’s rate plan.

The state’s oldest and largest investor-owned electric and natural gas utility has to propose a rate plan for approval from the Washington Utilities and Transportation Commission (UTC).

The regulatory body approved PSE’s rate plan for 2013 – which included automatic rate increase for customers through 2017 at the company’s option – but it was challenged by customer advocates who worried rates could be unfairly calculated.

The state Attorney General’s Public Counsel Unit and the Industrial Customers of NW Utilities appealed UTC’s decision on behalf of customers.

“This is an important win for PSE’s ratepayers,” Attorney General Bob Ferguson said in a statement. “The court’s ruling will ensure that customers’ rates under the multiyear plan will be fairly calculated.”
Ferguson said the ruling could save residential and industrial customers as much as $10 million.

Thurston County Superior Court Judge Carol Murphy sent the plan back to the UTC to determine new rates, but denied a challenge that would have overturned automatic annual rate increases.

Kimberly Harris, PSE president and CEO, hosted a talk for the Puget Sound Business Journal’s Business 

Journal Live series, where she spoke about making customers a priority for the company.

PSE this week received $3.8 million of a $14.3 million state grant for so-called “smart grid” technology intended to help state utilities better and more efficiently utilize solar and wind power.

Source: Puget Sound Business Journal. Ashley Stewart. 7/9/14

Wednesday, July 9, 2014

The Future of Solar is Bright

With federal, state, and utility incentives, the residential solar industry is seeing growth upwards of 50% per year.

In 2005, Western Washington University professor, Jack Hardy, started a renewal energy company as more of a hobby. Nine years later, his garage start-up is thriving with two locations and over 130 projects completed last year alone.

Now retired, Jack’s legacy is doing business as Western Solar Inc and under new direction. Josh Miller, General Manager, reported substantial growth in 2013. “We installed the second largest number of projects in the state last year. Our business has easily grown 50% annually since 2009.”

Recently, Miller completed a contract for a 108kW/400 panel installation which will mark the largest array in King County and fourth largest array in the state. This project will take what was once a small town operation and make it into one of the leading solar installation businesses in the Puget Sound.

According to the Solar Energy Industries Association’s (SEIA) U.S. Solar Market Insight Report, photovoltaic (PV) installations increased 41% nationwide since 2012. This pencils out to an increase of nearly fifteen times the installations six years ago, making solar the second largest source of new electricity behind natural gas. To date, there are over 445,000 PV systems operating in the states, with 140,000 of those installed in 2013.

The boost in PV installations created more than 10 new jobs every hour, as reported in The Solar Foundation’s National Solar Jobs Census. Nearly 143,000 workers joined the solar industry in 2013.

SEIA reported that the average price of solar panels declined 60 percent since 2011 making solar more affordable. Rebates and incentives are also making solar more attractive to Washington residents.

The financial incentives available for homeowners currently rank among the richest programs in the United States. Until 2016, there is a 30 percent federal tax credit for residential properties and no state sales tax on equipment or installation until 2018.

Additionally, local utilities offer production rebates. According to the Database of State Incentives for Renewables and Efficiency, Washington has one of the highest performance-based incentives in the world. Grid-interactive systems may receive production incentives ranging from $0.12 to $0.54/kWh or up to $5,000 per year. Multiplying factors of this incentive are based upon the electricity produced using equipment manufactured in Washington State.

Snohomish PUD customers are eligible for an additional one-time credit of $500 for every kWh installed, capped at $2,500, on qualifying units.

The return on investment, once taking ten years, is now closer to five to seven years. With Washington based panel manufactures offering a 25 year warranty and production expectancy of 35-40 years, anyone with initial funding would be hard pressed to turn down switching to solar.

With 50-60% projected growth in 2014, those in the solar industry like Miller are in for a positive fiscal year, making for a very bright future.

Source: Written by- Amanda Brock. Western Solar Inc. Marketing Director. July 2014.

Boston's Solar-Powered Benches Will Charge Phones and Collect Data

President Barack Obama and Sandra Richter of Cambridge, Mass., on an example of eco-friendly urban furniture, a solar-powered "soofa," on June 18 in Washington, D.C.
President Barack Obama and Sandra Richter of Cambridge, Mass., on an example of eco-friendly urban furniture, a solar-powered "soofa," on June 18 in Washington, D.C. Photograph by Mike Theiler-Pool/Getty Images
 
Boston has started installing park benches that double as electronic device charging stations. “Your cell phone doesn’t just make phone calls,” said Boston Mayor Martin Walsh last week. “Why should our benches just be seats?”

The multitasking benches, dubbed Soofas, have USB ports in which park dwellers can plug in their devices. The seats also connect wirelessly to the Internet to upload local environmental data such as air quality and noise levels, as well as information on how much energy is being generated. So far, two Soofas have been placed in Boston Common and two in Titus Sparrow Park. Several more will be added in Boston and Cambridge in coming weeks.

Soofas are the creation of Changing Environments, an MIT Media Lab spin-out co-founded by three women in their early thirties—a designer, an electrical engineer, and a marketing expert. “We’re all from Germany, where solar energy is very popular,” says Sandra Richer, the startup’s co-founder and chief executive. “We were thinking about how can we change public opinion to accept more solar … and start a dialogue about air quality in cities and renewable energy.” Verizon is providing the group with technical support, and Cisco Systems paid for Boston’s first benches.

Changing Environments plans to make all the Soofa data publicly available once it improves its real-time data map. The group is also hoping to speed up production and develop more advanced versions of the bench. “This is a small, three-girl operation right now,” says Richter. “We’ve gotten a lot of calls already from cities and people asking, ‘When do we get our Soofa for our city or boardwalk?’”

Public access USB ports do present some unique problems. When New York inaugurated charging stations last year, experts warned that hackers might implant tiny computers to infect phones with viruses that could steal banking information, e-mail passwords, and perhaps even track the movement of phone owners. Richter says Soofas, made from concrete, sheet metal, and wood, won’t be vulnerable to such attacks. “The concrete boxes are screwed with security screws and only we have the actual bits to open them,” she says. “If one were to take an ax and hammer to one, the electronics would be useless.”
To make money, Changing Environments plans to charge a setup and monthly subscription fee or charge people, organizations, and companies to have their names and brands featured on subtle bench plaques. The startup has yet to determine its pricing. Another option, says Richter, would be to use motion sensors on the Soofas to collect data for companies, allowing them to better gauge how many passersby are in the area. “So if they have a billboard in the area, for example,” Richter says, “they’ll know how many people are likely to see it.”

Source: Caroline Winter. Bloomberg Businessweek in New York. 7/1/14

Thursday, July 3, 2014

Interfaith Coalition Goes Solar!

Later this summer, Western Solar and Itek Energy are teaming up to help Interfaith Coalition reach their goal of going solar on their housing!  As part of our commitment to strengthen our local community, we will be donating labor and equipment at cost to the healthcare provider which serves 44 diverse congregations in Whatcom County each year.

Itek Energy will also be contributing by donating five of the ten panels that will be installed on the upper half of the south facing roof.

The estimated energy savings that the panels will provide once installed is approximately 2,435 kWh per year. That is equivalent to a reduction of CO2 emissions from 189 gallons of gasoline and 1,803 pounds of coal!

To learn more about Interfaith Coalition click here.

Equivalency data was provided by The US Environmental Protection Agency.

Tuesday, July 1, 2014

Itek Solar Panels - See the Specs!

We get a lot of questions regarding Made-in-Bellingham solar panels and why wouldn’t we?! They are highly efficient, monocrystalline modules reaching power outputs above 270 Watts! Designed to utilize more of the Northwest’s defused light, standard racking systems and weighing only 43 lbs, they are also very most economical.  The 2″ frame is designed specifically to allow for micro-inverter and DC Optimizer attachments, along with extra snow and wind loads. The silicon cells are some of the highest efficiency p-type cells on the market. The encapsulates are of the highest quality in the industry and the ultra-clear, low iron solar glass is specifically designed and manufactured for light conditions common in the Pacific Northwest.


Check out the spec sheet on these Certified Made-in-WA Solar Modules!