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2.13.2011

Enter the Dream Home Giveaway-Courtesy of HGTV


Sweepstakes Ends Friday: Enter again for a chance to win HGTV Dream Home 2011!
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HGTV Dream Home 2011 Jan. 1 - Feb. 18, 2011 Enjoy All Seasons in Stowe, Vermont! Enter twice per day - once on HGTV.com and once on FrontDoor.com - for your chance to win the luxuriously furnished HGTV Dream Home 2011, plus a 2011 GMC Acadia Denali and $500,000 cash, a grand prize package worth more than $2 million! (GMC, Acadia and Denali are registered trademarks of General Motors)
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Example of Solar Out Producing Wind

Spokane, WA, USA -- Blustery gusts keep a wind turbine spinning at Inland Power and Light's corporate headquarters on the West Plains, but solar panels are the real powerhouse at the utility's alternative energy pilot project..solar panels have produced about five times as much electricity as the wind turbine..Solar panels, on the other hand, generate a certain amount of electricity even on cloudy days..our meter runs backwards...

Solar Takes Wind in Test

By Becky Kramer, The Spokesman-Review   |   January 31, 2011
Utility hopes to inform customers with project

The solar panels have produced about five times as much electricity as the wind turbine over the past 14 months. The sun's ability to generate more electricity than the wind – even during short winter days – has surprised the utility's engineers.

"Solar," said Richard Damiano, the utility's chief engineer, "is trouncing wind."

Inland Power set up the experiment to help the utility customers compare alternative-energy options for their homes. Each year, the utility fields from 50 to 60 calls from people interested in producing some of their own electricity. Initially, most think they want a wind turbine, Damiano said.

To help customers with the analysis, Inland Power officials decided to collect their own data.

The utility bought a 35-foot wind turbine and a bank of solar panels. The systems are representative of technology scaled to individual homeowner use, Damiano said. Each cost from $22,000 to $24,000 to install.

Conventional thinking suggested that wind turbines would outperform solar panels, particularly on gray winter days.

"It's the West Plains, so there's a perception that the wind is always blowing," Damiano said.

But wind is more erratic than people realize, he said. The wind dies down, for instance, during hot weather and cold spells. Inland Power's turbine is similar to the larger ones installed in the Columbia River Gorge. It needs a stiff breeze of around 12 miles per hour to start producing electricity.

Solar panels, on the other hand, generate a certain amount of electricity even on cloudy days.

During the first 13 days of January, Inland Power's solar panels produced 35 kilowatt-hours of electricity, compared with 10 kilowatt-hours from wind generation.

The results don't surprise Linda Finney, who sold the wind turbine to Inland Power. She and her husband initially installed it on a grassy hill above their home on the Palouse Highway, about 12 miles south of Spokane. After two years, they took the turbine down because it wasn't generating the results they hoped for, and they replaced it with 16 solar panels.

At certain times of the year, "our meter runs backwards," said Finney, executive director of Leadership Spokane. "We're banking energy during the summer months."

Damiano said some customers do the research and still end up with wind turbines. In areas heavily shaded by trees, for instance, wind turbines can outperform solar panels.

In the Inland Power pilot project, the solar panels produced about 15 percent of a typical household's electric needs over the course of a year. The wind turbine produced less than 3 percent.

From a cost-benefit standpoint, erecting a wind turbine or putting in solar panels is still a reach for most homeowners, Damiano said. Those who take the plunge are making a lifestyle choice to reduce their carbon footprint, he said. Recovering the installation costs for turbines or solar panels can take years, even with the 30 percent tax subsidy available to homeowners.

"It will take you a chunk of time," Finney acknowledged. But she encourages people to think about the long-term benefits.

"Some people spend $25,000 on a new car," she said. "We decided this is how we wanted to live and how we wanted to spend our money."

Becky Kramer is a reporter for The Spokesman-Review in the Idaho department. She covers the environment, natural resources and utilities.

Copyright 2011.  Reproduced with permission of The Spokesman-Review. Permission is granted in the interest of public discussion and does not imply endorsement of any product, service or organization otherwise mentioned herein.



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Fossil Fuels Out--In with Solar, Wind, and Water

For wind energy aficionados, one of the most interesting stories to make its way across the internet last week involved an academic study claiming that the installation of 3.8 million 5 MW wind turbines could generate half the world's power needs by 2030.

Published in the respected journal Energy Policy, and entitled 'Providing all global energy with wind, water, and solar power,' the study noted climate change, pollution, and energy insecurity are among the greatest problems of our time.

"Addressing them requires major changes in our energy infrastructure," said the two California academics, Mark Z. Jacobson and Mark A. Delucchi. "Here, we analyze the feasibility of providing worldwide energy for all purposes (electric power, transportation, heating/cooling, etc.) from wind, water, and sunlight (WWS)."

Jacobson, who is in the Department of Civil and Environmental Engineering at Stanford University, and Delucchi, in the Institute of Transportation Studies at the University of California in Davis, estimate that by combining the 3.8 million wind turbines with enough concentrated solar, solar PV, geothermal and hydroelectric plants, as well as wave devices and tidal turbines, by 2030 the world could use electricity and electrolytic hydrogen for all purposes.

"Such a WWS infrastructure reduces world power demand by 30% and requires only 0.41% and 0.59% more of the world's land for footprint and spacing, respectively," they said.

"We suggest producing all new energy with WWS by 2030 and replacing the pre-existing energy by 2050. Barriers to the plan are primarily social and political, not technological or economic. The energy cost in a WWS world should be similar to that today."

Their study showed that wind power could supply article continues click here

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2.12.2011

Solar Energy Investing News

Truth About Solar Energy Stocks

The bottom line is that the sun can provide us with more energy than we actually use on a daily basis.

Of all the energy sources available to us, the Sun is our largest source by far, dropping 970 trillion kWh worth of free energy on us every day. Enough solar energy strikes the United States each day to supply its needs for one and a half years.

Put another way, the amount of solar energy the Earth receives every minute is greater than the amount of energy from fossil fuels the world uses in a year!

Now modern attempts to harvest the sun's energy date back to the 1870s, and the first solar motor company was founded in 1900. The first documented design was a concentrating solar power (CSP) device.

Today, CSP plants have been radically improved. Modern plants usually use huge arrays of parabolic trough mirrors to superheat oil or molten salts, which is then used to drive a turbine. Such designs have two key advantages: They can provide their own power storage and continue operating when the sun goes down; or when the sun isn't shining, they can be switched over to run on natural gas.

Of course, most solar investors will find the bulk of solar opportunities – not in CSP – but in photovoltaics (PV).

PV is what most people think of when talking about solar. This is what you see when you gaze upon solar panels on the roof of a home or building.

From solar cells to panels to ingots – silicon-based PV is where we've seen the most opportunity for investors. Some of the most establish PV or PV-related companies include


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