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(Photo by Hu Weiguo/VCG via Getty Images)

For over two thousands years, scientists have experimented with ways to capture the energy of the sun. Archimedes in 212 BC, for instance, famously rigged a system of mirrors that was used to spark fires aboard enemy ships—sort of like an ancient heat ray.

Over time, the methods of capturing solar energy have obviously evolved (and perhaps become a bit less dramatic) but there are persisting questions for scientists: How do you best store the energy from the sun, and how do you distribute it cheaply and efficiently at scale?

From my perspective, as a person who cares deeply about the environment and the future of our planet, those questions are among society’s most pressing concerns. Global warming is an existential threat to humanity, and we must reduce our dependence on fossil fuels. But I’m also an investor who embraces the belief that fossil fuels and carbon emissions will eventually be phased out entirely. I’ve been calling it the “clean energy revolution,” and to get there, we must cultivate new ideas, start anew, and listen to the boldest visionaries who are addressing these problems at a global scale.

Recently I had the chance to speak with one of those visionaries: A scientist who has spent an entire career working on (and inventing) grid-level renewable energy storage mechanisms. Professor Donald Sadoway is a current MIT professor, an inventor with over a dozen patents, and a 2012 TIME “Most Influential Person of the Year” for his pioneering research. He has even been called the “Mick Jagger” of battery science researchers, a qualification I asked him about in our conversation.  “I’m not sure I’d want to turn Mick loose in my laboratory,” Professor Sadoway told me. “But maybe metaphorically speaking they’re saying that I do dare to do things differently.”

And what does he do differently? Professor Sadoway is a bit of a renegade amongst battery researchers. Most industry executives and researchers argue that lithium-ion batteries will pave the pathway to the future of solar storage. Tesla’s Powerwall, for instance, uses rechargeable lithium-ion batteries for stationary energy storage that can power your home through the sun’s rays. The lithium-ion market is projected to be worth $93.1 billion by 2025, according to Grand View research, but Sadoway believes that lithium-ion has limitations that should not be underplayed.

“Nobody in the in the modern world is going to settle for green electricity only part of the time,” he says. “We expect electricity on demand all the time. Wind doesn’t blow all the time and sun doesn’t shine all the time. The missing piece is storage. Lithium-ion batteries are out there and it works in your phone and in your computer, but no one has ever installed lithium-ion batteries at grid scale unless it was part of some demonstration. The costs are still way too high. I see everything pivoting on the availability of reliable grid-level storage.” (For more on that, watch Sadoway’s TED talk, “The missing link to renewable energy.”

Earlier this year, Professor Sadoway published results of his new battery technology, using liquid metal, in Nature, the world’s preeminent science journal. “The battery, based on electrodes made of sodium and nickel chloride and using a new type of metal mesh membrane, could be used for grid-scale installations to make intermittent power sources such as wind and solar capable of delivering reliable baseload electricity,” MIT’s press release noted. It’s certainly an innovative idea, and one that Sadoway believes could lead us into a new era of sustainable energy storage.

“I consider this a breakthrough,” Sadoway said in the release, “because for the first time in five decades, this type of battery — whose advantages include cheap, abundant raw materials, very safe operational characteristics, and an ability to go through many charge-discharge cycles without degradation — could finally become practical.”

Professor Sadoway has over four decades of experience, and his breakthroughs are coming at a critical juncture for the path to a renewable future. As a global society, we simply need to find better ways to cultivate and store wind and solar energy—before it’s too late.

Read on for our edited Q&A with Professor Sadoway, where he talks about sustainable energy solutions and the future of battery design.

Arne Alsin: In your view, what will it take to wean our society off of fossil fuels, leading to more renewable energy technologies?

Donald Sadoway: What I’ve learned is that no one is going to embrace any of this clean technology unless it’s going to give you a product that is comparable to what we have now, or even superior to what we have now, and at a price that’s comparable to what we have now.

The notion that if I show up and I say look, ‘I can sell you steel that is made with zero greenhouse gas emissions, but it’s a little bit inferior to steel that you can buy otherwise, and it’s going to it’s going to cost a little bit more…’ People won’t buy it. And so I’ve set cost as a factor in the early discovery stage. That’s the sort of the weakness of university-based research when when people are just inventing the coolest chemistry… But if what you want to do is to radically disrupt something like the world steel industry or the world aluminum industry, you better think about cost on day one—not on day one thousand.

That’s really changed the way I go about conducting even the most early stage research on campus.

Alsin: Would you tell me how your battery differs from lithium—and why it’s potentially better?

Sadoway: The thing that makes this thing so compelling to me and blows the doors off of lithium-ion is that unlike lithium-ion, our data, not only from campus, but from [my startup] Ambri, is that we have battery cells that have been running for over four years with 100{0b7da518931e2dc7f5435818fa9adcc81ac764ac1dff918ce2cdfc05099e9974} depth of discharge. They’ve logged over five thousand cycles, and those cells are retaining 99-plus percent of their initial capacity. That means this has the the features that would make it suitable for grid-level storage. Lithium-ion doesn’t.

So all we have to do is match lithium-ion for the installation cost and then anybody would be a fool not to choose liquid metal over lithium-ion.

Alsin: How does it work?

Sadoway: The liquid metal battery operates because it’s got electrodes made of liquid metal as opposed to lithium-ion, which has electrodes that are made of solid. Classical batteries have typically solid electrodes and a liquid electrolyte. In our case, we have both liquid electrodes and a molten salt, which is also a liquid electrolyte. 

The way the battery operates is that there’s density differences, and one of the metals is high density and it lies on the bottom of the cell, and then above that is the molten salt which is the electrolyte.  And then on top of the molten salt lies a low density liquid metal… The three layers just self segregate, kind of like oil and vinegar. So that’s that’s the basic premise behind it, and at MIT we’ve invented a plurality of chemistries that can serve as the electrode choice for the top layer and the electrode choice for the bottom layer.

Alsin: What do lithium-ion researchers say about your research? Does that make you a controversial person in this field?

Sadoway: I think that people look at it and they’ll say, ‘Well, it’s fine for Professor Sadoway to publish in the leading journals of the world. Nature’s arguably the premier scientific journal on the planet. Some people call it the “gateway to the Nobel Prize.” But they’ll say this just isn’t practical.

I accept the criticism. In the end, the market is the arbiter. If you want to find someone who’s Debbie Downer, talk to a battery guy. Battery guys are pessimists, they’re skeptical, and they’re very tribal. So lithium-ion guys have lithium-ion war paint on, and they see me as wearing liquid metal war paint and so therefore they say condemnatory things.

But I don’t care about that. It doesn’t matter what the battery guys say. It’s what the market says. If we get a product and it performs the way I believe it will perform with no capacity fade and round trip efficiency, giving you electricity that is cheaper than what we have right now, the stuff will fly off the shelves.  Because the market doesn’t care.

The moral of the story is that innovation in batteries will not come from the battery industry. In fact, the battery industry might stand in the roadway to block the advance of new battery technology.

Alsin: What do you mean by that? Is this a sort of innovator’s dilemma type of situation of who will create the next generation of energy-efficient batteries?

Sadoway: Right, the incumbents aren’t going to point the way to the future.

Disruption in the big industries is going to come from outside the industry. We see that over and over again. Be prepared to see disruption coming from the most unlikely places.  

Alsin: When you think about CO2 emissions, do you envision an accelerating interest around battery science?

Sadoway: Yes, but the problem is that just as there are incumbents in battery production, there are incumbents in battery research. And 99{0b7da518931e2dc7f5435818fa9adcc81ac764ac1dff918ce2cdfc05099e9974} of the battery research on lithium-ion is incremental improvements. You can’t just wave a magic wand and say, “Innovate!” They’re incapable. So it goes back to who funds it. Government? Private enterprise? We definitely have to be bolder in our innovation when it comes to what goes beyond lithium-ion. We have to apply the criterion “If successful, how big is the impact?” And we have to have the courage to fail.

Alsin: As investors, we believe we’re going through a renewable energy revolution—or disruption, if you like. How do you think the next 50 years of energy disruption plays out?

Sadoway: Well, I think that there are efforts at disruption. I think there’s a lot of interest in substituting fossil fuels with renewables—wind and solar—but I think the truth be told we’re not seeing the disruption at a large enough scale. And all the forecasting is, in my mind, off base. You can take a semi-log plot and get a coefficient and project into 2030 and 2050.

But basically all you’re doing is grabbing what’s happening with respect to early adopters and trying to make it mainstream. In my judgment, the reason that renewables are not taking over is that without storage they stall, because if you go 100{0b7da518931e2dc7f5435818fa9adcc81ac764ac1dff918ce2cdfc05099e9974} solar, close down all of your fossil fuel burning plants, what are you going to do after dark?

Alsin: So what has to happen for us to get to grid-level storage capabilities? 

Sadoway: You have to have all of the pieces in the puzzle. And while the cost of PV solar has dropped dramatically in the last 15 years, the prices still have come way, way down. But now, as I said earlier, what do you do after dark? People people have been allowing certain aspects of the system to get far out in front, while the other aspects are lagging so far behind. The chain is as strong as its weakest link. So if I gave you solar for free, you still can’t do it right now because you don’t have storage, and if you don’t have storage for solar, it’s useless.

If you give people the option, “Would you rather have green electricity or dirty electricity?” They’ll say green. Now if you say the green electricity is going to cost a lot more than the dirty electricity, how much you want to pay more per month on your bill? $5? $10? $100? You’ll find they’re not willing to pay much of a premium for all green electricity.

Alsin: What do you think of Tesla’s Powerwall and their solar energy innovations?

I applaud Tesla for raising our sights on this, but I’m not sure that we’ve got data that show that you can take the Powerwall and use it to 100{0b7da518931e2dc7f5435818fa9adcc81ac764ac1dff918ce2cdfc05099e9974} depth of discharge every day to allow you to get through the evening after the sun has gone down. My understanding of the use patterns that are prescribed for Powerwall is infrequent use.

It’s a step in the right direction, but obviously I don’t believe in lithium-ion for this application, otherwise I’d be working on it. That’s why I’ve worked so hard on liquid metal battery because I dismiss lithium as a bad fit for grid-level storage. It works well in a in a phone or in a computer, but I even question its utility in a 70 kilowatt-hour automobile.

Alsin: You said in a recent NYTimes editorial that without requisite research, we can’t expect commercialization. What does that look like to you?

Sadoway: I think in the pre-competitive stages it’s going to have to come from government agencies where they fund radical innovation. They have planning horizons that can go five to 15 years. They don’t worry about the likelihood of success—instead they think about the potential impact if successful. They realize that they might give a dozen grants and the majority of them are going to fail, but the few that succeed are going to be game changers. That’s the that’s the way we have to proceed.

Alsin: Tell me about Ambri—your startup—and what sort of goals and challenges you’re looking at?

Sadoway: It’s been seven years and I was hoping we’d already have product to market by now, so it’s been a long journey. The reason is that the electrochemistry, as as was invented here at MIT, has worked beautifully. We’ve never had any hiccups with the electrochemistry.

But it’s all about the conversion to a marketable product at scale, and that means the battery’s going to have thousands of cells. And how do you manufacture this? We’re not manufacturing it to a price point that will compete with fossil fuels. So, you know, you’re going to have to build this thing out of cheap, earth-abundant materials. It’s going to have to be a cheap ceramic that doesn’t crack, and can withstand all sorts of thermal excursions.

Alsin: One clean energy journalist characterized you and your work as the Mick Jagger of battery researchers. What do you make that comparison?

Sadoway: I don’t know! I mean, you don’t want to hear me sing. And I’m not sure I’d want to turn Mick loose in my laboratory. But maybe metaphorically speaking they’re saying that I do dare to do things differently.  The Rolling Stones hit the scene when I was a teenager, along with the Beatles, and I always preferred the rougher musicians. So I don’t know where this guy got the idea of comparing me to Mick Jagger as opposed to Paul McCartney, but he made the right choice!

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In the Mediterranean, one gorgeous Greek island is quickly proving itself as a leader in sustainability. Tiny Tilos is an island that just became entirely powered by wind and solar energy. Thanks to its late mayor, Tassos Aliferis, who was a well-known and dedicated environmentalist, Tilos has become a model for other islands looking to transition their energy source from traditional power grids.

Located in the Dodecanese, the entire island is a nature reserve with more than 150 species of resident and migratory birds, over 650 varieties of fauna, and a permanent population of around 500. By installing a single wind turbine and small photovoltaic park, Tilos created a hybrid micro-grid that generates and stores energy.

According to AP News, the European Commission says Tilos will be the first autonomous renewable green island in the Mediterranean. It plans to use the project as a blueprint for other small islands across the European Union that have limited grid connection to the mainland. The EU has largely funded the project, providing 11 million euros ($12.5 million) of the total 13.7 million-euro ($15.7 million) cost.



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Posing at the contract signing ceremony for the US$420-million project is B.Grimm Power President Preeyanart Soontornwata (centre), flanked by PowerChina Executive Vice President Ji Xiaoyong (left) and Xuan Cau CEO Dao Trong Khanh. credit: B. Grimm

Posing at the contract signing ceremony for the US$420-million project is B.Grimm Power President Preeyanart Soontornwata (centre), flanked by PowerChina Executive Vice President Ji Xiaoyong (left) and Xuan Cau CEO Dao Trong Khanh. credit: B. Grimm

JinkoSolar has signed off on a 240MW solar module supply agreement with POWERCHINA Huadong Engineering for the second phase of the 420MW Dau Tieng solar plant in Vietnam.

Once completed, the installation will be the largest PV project completed in Southeast Asia. 

The Dau Tieng project is being developed by Vietnam’s Xuan Cau and Thailand’s B.Grimm Power Public, while POWERCHINA will handle EPC duties. 

Gener Miao, Vice President of global sales and marketing of JinkoSolar, said: “We stood out from our competition during the selection process by POWERCHINA HUADONG as a result of our excellent products, high-quality services and strong brand recognition. With the reduction of solar costs, the competitiveness of solar energy is increasing, we look forward to working closely again with POWERCHINA to participate in more outstanding solar energy projects globally.”

Leiming Shi, vice president of POWERCHINA HUADONG, added: “A number of projects developed by POWERCHINA HUADONG are located in countries that often experience power shortages along the ‘Belt and Road’ route. These projects have strengthened the partnerships between each country and have helped Chinese companies to go global, allowing them to gain valuable experience in the planning, design, construction and operation of solar plants. Developing a partnership with a global leader like JinkoSolar to push this project forward allows us to use their high quality modules and leverage their mature global sales network. We look forward to deepening our relationship by working on more international power projects in the future and jointly expanding the influence of Chinese companies in the international clean energy market.”

Beijing-based PowerChina International Group was awarded the contract to develop the 420MW project. It will cost around US$420 million to construct.

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vietnam, jinkosolar, module supply deals

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EDITOR:

I’m a 13-year old Boy Scout from Troop 117 in Shingle Springs. I am currently working toward the completion of the communication merit badge and the rank of Eagle Scout. I wanted to ask you a few questions about the state of California’s energy grid and why we are not taking advantage of solar power on a larger scale.

We obviously have a lot of sun in California. Reducing pollution is a big priority for our state. Using more renewable energy and less fossil fuel is key to help lower our carbon footprint so our planet can survive for us all. Why are we not building large solar farms all over the desert and non-populated areas of California or even Nevada?

My next question is why we are not offering truly free solar to the residents of California? You know those Verizon or AT&T commercials advertising you can get a free phone? Why can’t we do that with solar? The energy bills are getting more expensive and don’t show any sign of stopping. My parents tell me their PG&E bill goes up 5 to 8 percent every year with the same amount of power usage. People who would install the new free solar panels would be paid by government programs and incentives as well as be compensated by the energy companies. Because most homes with solar make more power then they use, the energy companies get free power from us. Energy companies like PG&E or SMUD then sell that energy to other states for money that can be used to help pay the installers. I know that sounds expensive for the government and weird for energy companies; but think how much happier people would be! And we would also get bragging rights for the most efficient state!

My purpose for writing this  is to hopefully start a community discussion about solutions to alternative energy sources.

I want to thank you for your time reading this letter. I hope to hear back from you when you are not so busy.

 

MANUEL ALLEN CORDEIRO

Placerville

 

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A combination of rooftop solar on campus buildings and a solar car-port will soon provide one-fifth of the electricity needed to power Flinders University.

South Australia`s Finders University has installed 1.8 MW of solar PV across its campus, including 4136  panels over an existing car park to create a solar car-port, and a further 1681 panels across six roof-tops.

Costing $4.895 million, the project is expected to pay for itself within seven years and will continue to generate energy for the rest of its expected life of 25 years.

The project also sets the scene for the introduction of autonomous campus shuttles run on renewable energy.

“The solar car-port will include a charging dock for recharging planned autonomous shuttles that will ferry people across campus from the future Flinders rail station. We’ve made provision for charging points for plug-in electric vehicles, to encourage their use on campus by providing access to free solar energy, ” Vice-Chancellor Professor Colin Stirling says.

The project adds to existing solar arrays on the University’s new Student Hub, and Law and Commerce Buildings, illustrating Flinders’ increasing commitment to environmental sustainability.

“While we are improving our operational costs, we’re also providing an opportunity for our researchers to test ‘real world’ deployment of renewable energy technologies on our localized electricity grid at Bedford Park, as we create a more robust system with flexible forms of supply,” Professor Stirling says.

This is one of the first projects delivered under Flinders University’s draft sustainability plan, which is aiming for zero net emissions from electricity by 2020. Flinders also aims to reduce campus electricity demand by 30{0b7da518931e2dc7f5435818fa9adcc81ac764ac1dff918ce2cdfc05099e9974} from a 2015 baseline, through renewable energy generation and storage.

The project, which is scheduled to switch on in October, expands on other recent initiatives such as the Adelaide Airport’s 1.2 MW system, the new Royal Adelaide Hospital 1 MW microgrid, and the 1 MW rooftop system at the Royal Adelaide showgrounds.

Overall, this is yet another Australian university that has turned to solar looking to reduce its electricity demand and reduce its carbon emissions. Other notable projects include: the University of Queensland looking to offset 100{0b7da518931e2dc7f5435818fa9adcc81ac764ac1dff918ce2cdfc05099e9974} of its energy needs with solar, Monash University‘s 4 MW PV microgrid, Charles Stuart University’s 1.77 MW rooftop solar installation and the University of New South Wales, which is seeking to become 100{0b7da518931e2dc7f5435818fa9adcc81ac764ac1dff918ce2cdfc05099e9974} solar powered.

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Ravinder Makhaik

Solar power tariffs having dropped to a record low are saving many Himalayan river vistas from disappearing, as interest in hydropower development has waned significantly.

Many potential project sites that were allotted a decade ago are being abandoned or surrendered, as competitive tariff loses out to cheaper solar power. 

Unable to motivate developers to get started on stalled projects, an anguished chief minister Jai Ram Thakur put up his case at a state power ministers conference that had Union Power Minister RK Singh in attendance as “hydropower should get the same priority as solar.”

In June the government had nudged developers of 21 stalled projects to submit revised completion schedules. “We have asked power producers to expedite work on these projects,” said Tarun Kapoor, additional chief secretary (power).


“Hydro-electricity vis-a-vis solar energy is so expensive today, who would want to develop a hydropower plant anymore?” is how Deepak Sanan, a retired bureaucrat, summed it up.

For over two decades, hydropower generation has been sold as a pipe dream to achieve financial self-sufficiency by the state, but Himachal continues to sink deeper into debt, as the government expenditure keeps ballooning every year.

Besides, taming rivers for hydro-electricity has left scars that have defaced the scenic valley and damaged ecological habitats, as many river stretches disappeared into tunnels.

“This cannot be anything but an unmitigated disaster, for a river is not just a flowing mass of water – it is an entire eco-system sustaining human, animal and rich aquatic life within it,” is how a Himachal Pradesh High Court-appointed committee had raised concerns about damages to micro-climates being caused by vanishing rivers.  The Satluj originates in the vicinity of Lake Mansarovar- Mount Kailash peak on the Tibetan plateau, as do the Bhramaputra and the Indus, and enters Himachal at an altitude of 3,000 metres and flows out from Bhakra Dam at about 500 metres. 

Bhakra Dam, Kol Dam, Nathpha Jhakri Dam and Karcham Wangtoo Dam have already sliced up the river into parts and if the full hydro potential is developed, the original river will be gone and will only be preserved for small stretches in its current form. For the Ravi, a natural flow of over 70 km has already been broken down by cascading dams and only 3 km of the river now flows in its original bed.

German geographer Alexander Erlewein in his study “Disappearing rivers – The limits of environmental assessment for hydropower in India” holds that fragmentation of such large rivers that are as old as the Himalayas, has severely “damaged habitats of animals and plants that depend upon it for migration and dissemination.” 

Whereas the Pong, Bhakra and Kol dam projects have disrupted the natural river flows and inundated large tracts of fertile land, others like the Nathpa Jhakri, Karchma Wangtoo and Chamera dams harness electricity by diverting the river into tunnels to create a fall downstream to run turbines at a generation plant.

Studying the impact of hydro-electric project development around the ecologically sensitive Great Himalayan National Park (GHNP), which involved construction of roads and associated activities of dam building that involved blasting, dumping and heavy-machine usage, researcher Virat Jolli from Delhi University Environmental Sciences Department in his 2017 paper found that “habitat disturbance had significantly affected the diversity, richness and abundance of bird species in the Sanj Valley.”



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The government of India has once again floated the idea of setting up a large solar power project in the Ladakh region. 

The region receives the highest solar radiation per unit area in India.


The Minister for New & Renewable Energy and Power, RK Singh, recently said at an event that the central government will issue a single tender to set up a 25 gigawatt solar power park in the Ladakh district of Jammu & Kashmir. 

The project will deliver power to a transmission point in the neighboring state of Himachal Pradesh for further dispensation. 

If implemented, the solar power park will be India’s largest. The current largest solar power park planned and approved by the Indian government is the five gigawatt Dholera solar power park in Gujarat. Phase-wise tenders for this project are expected to be launched soon.


The proposed tender for Ladakh solar power park will also have a component of battery storage. At present, India has no large-scale solar power project equipped with battery storage that has been auctioned by any state or central government.

The Solar Energy Corporation of India (SECI) has flirted with the idea of issuing battery-inclusive tenders in the past but did not receive encouraging responses from project developers in terms of tariff rates. After multiple attempts, only one small utility-scale solar power project with battery storage was auctioned for the Andaman Islands.

Despite having the highest per unit area radiation in the country, Ladakh has not seen any progress in the development of large-scale solar power projects. Attempts were previously made to move ahead with the implementation of a large solar power park, but logistics and lack of transmission infrastructure for power evacuation remained serious challenges.

The remote and hilly terrain of the region makes it cumbersome for developers to deliver large-scale projects at tariffs competitive to projects located in other parts of the country, such as Rajasthan. This is the reason that while solar panels are widely used for smaller applications across Ladakh, large projects are yet to find any success.

At present, Ladakh is connected with the rest of the country through two roads. Both these roads are open only for a few months during summer. Such restriction would make it impossible for project developers to complete the project in timelines given for similar projects in other parts of the country. While the central government has ordered construction of a tunneled road for round-the-year connectivity, the road project would take seven years for completion. Courtesy: CleanTechnica.com



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After years of consideration, the city of Ringgold is getting closer to its first solar-powered project after recently awarding a bid to add solar panels to its shop area.

During the July 23 City Council meeting, officials awarded a bid for the work to Atlanta-based Hannah Solar for just under $46,000.

“We got about four bids in to put solar panels on our barn where we have crews down there working,” Mayor Nick Millwood said.

City Manager Dan Wright explained that there was an issue with the initial bids and that the process had to be redone.

“The initial bid opening we held was June 27, and there was an administrative-type issue there, so we had to reject all the bids based on the city attorney’s opinion, and then we rebid it on July 18 and Hannah Solar was the lowest and best bid at $45,995,” Wright said.

Half of the project is being funded through a grant from the Georgia Environmental Finance Authority (GEFA).

“This particular project will be funded at 50 percent by GEFA, so we’re very fortunate that we were able to get a grant for that amount of money,” Wright said. “We’re on a very tight schedule to try to get this project in. This was GEFA money that was left over from a previous grant cycle, left unappropriated, so we were able to pick that up.”

This first solar project will give the city a chance to test the waters for future projects.

“The project is to place 22.77 kilowatts of flush-mounted solar arrays up on one of our pole barns,” Wright said. “The reason that it’s that size is … there’s an economic benefit. … If you get more (energy) than you need, then you sell it back to the electric company for just pennies on the dollar. So they try to size this to where you’re just underneath what you need or are expected to need.”

Councilman Randall Franks expressed his enthusiasm for the project, after being a part of the solar power discussion for a number of years during his tenure on the council.

“I’m just extremely excited,” Franks said. “We started looking at the potential of us using solar in Ringgold’s business almost nine years ago now, so I’m so happy to see we were finally able to get the money and have the ability to do that.”

The GEFA grant comes in at just over half the proposed cost.

“So, just to be clear, we’ve got $23,000 that’s basically being gifted to us from GEFA, so that’s half of this bid,” Mayor Millwood said. “That’s what they’re willing to put in, and we’re very happy to get that. We’ll look at the numbers moving forward and see what other projects we can perhaps do with solar.

Over the past couple of years, the city’s water treatment plant is an area where officials have said they’d eventually like to try using solar power.

The board unanimously approved awarding the bid and a 60-day completion timeline for the work.

On Aug. 13, however, Wright informed the Council that GEFA officials offered an extended timetable for completion.

“The contract has been signed off on by the mayor and the contractor,” Wright said. “They’ve offered an extension of time. We didn’t ask for it, but the lady at the state said it was an undoable time limit. We don’t think we’ll need but a week or two, but they’re giving us a 60-day extension.”



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Whidbey Islanders like to go green. Whidbey has more solar energy installations per capita than the rest of Washington, says the head of the island’s only solar installation company.

“The solar industry is thriving and we’re busier than ever now,” says Kelly Keilwitz, founder of Whidbey Sun and Wind in Coupeville.

“We’ve purchased a third truck and we’re increasing crews.

“But the solar energy principle called net metering is in jeopardy, and the issue is likely to come before the legislature again in the next session.”

Under Washington law, net metering enables commercial and residential solar users to get retail credit for excess production sent back to a power company.

Users can redeem the credit when they are not producing solar energy, such as during the rainy winter season.

Complex calculations determine the rate of net metering compensation, and power companies can quit paying once they reach a specified payment quota.

Most recently, public utilities districts, or PUD, in Clallam, Klickitat, and Kittitas counties, and member cooperative Inland Power and Light in the Spokane area, stopped net metering credit, says Allison Arnold of the state’s solar trade association.

Arnold explains that Washington has one of the lowest net metering structures in the country. Twelve of the 60 utility companies in Washington have reached their legal payment obligations.

In Klickitat County, she notes, commissioners voted against strong public support for the credit, even though net metering payments amounted to a small fraction of the utility’s costs.

Originally, the law was intended to encourage private investment in renewable energy, stimulate economic growth and enhance diversification of energy resources.

“Fair net metering has many social benefits that are not calculated in the total revenue impact,” says Arnold, the Executive Director of Solar Installers of Washington. “Abandonment of net metering has a chilling effect and undermines the intent of the law.”

Keilwitz says that Washington solar customers also get a production credit for the amount of energy they generate, and a bonus for using equipment made in Washington.

One of Whidbey’s best known solar installations is at historic Greenbank Farm. With help from a Seattle-based nonprofit organization, three dozen investors formed Island Community Solar in 2010 to manage the project.

The Greenbank installation is intended as an educational demonstration, using some power for the farm and sending some back to Puget Sound Energy.

The nonprofit became Spark Northwest, and Linda Irvine of Langley became program director of the organization supporting community solar in Washington and Oregon.

“We see solar as part of an economy where our energy is locally-controlled, affordable, and clean,” says Irvine, an original Island Community Solar partner.

“We no longer have to promote the environmental benefits of solar,” say Keilwitz.

“It’s a proven product and the cost of most installations is less than the price of a new car before credits and incentives. The return on investment is better than the average loan rate.”

Keilwitz is a geological and civil engineer by training. When he started the company in 2000, most of the business was solar water heaters before it was legal to connect to the power grid.

“I wanted to put my efforts toward doing something that makes a difference for the planet,” he says. “My original business plan wasn’t great, but the business is healthy. My goal is to have a sustainable business and support employees. There’s growth as well as uncertainty. I’m cautious about growing at any cost.”

According to Keilwitz, about 40 percent of his business now is installing solar on existing business and residential buildings. “The incentives are good, costs are low, new building creates demand. There’s never been a better time to go solar.”

Keilwitz explains there are three types of solar installations using photovoltaic cells usually mounted on a roof.

The first is a stand-alone system, with or without storage batteries. “It can be difficult to rely completely on solar with this system,” he says.

The second, and most common type involves connecting the solar system to the main power grid.

The third and most sophisticated method is a grid-connected system with storage batteries. With storage, the system owner can send more power back to the utility company and does not have to rely on the main power grid all the time, for example, when the power goes out.

Keilwitz says some newer photocells are more attractive and reduce what some consider the harsh visual impact of a solar installation. There were complaints about the appearance of solar panels when they were installed at Greenbank Farm.

He says the concept of solar shingles, such as those promised by the Tesla company, really isn’t new. There are questions about mixing a product intended to seal a roof with something that produces electricity. For example, problems could be more complicated if anything goes wrong with the roof.

He also observes that most electric vehicles would require more solar power than could be produced by panels on the top.

Despite technological improvements, lower costs, and increasing demand, both Keilwitz and Arnold emphasize that adjusting the net metering provision is essential to continued growth in solar energy.

A bill with bipartisan support passed the Senate last year, but didn’t get to debate in the House.

“Customers who generate power should be able to realize full value of their investment,” said Arnold.

“It would be in the best interest of the power companies to maintain good relations with solar producers, especially since utilities that invest in their own solar generation have to pay full cost of infrastucture,” he said.

Photo by Dave Felice / Whidbey News Group.
                                Electrician Kyle Collins measures mounting rails for new solar panels atop the home of Bob and Gladys Shepard.

Photo by Dave Felice / Whidbey News Group.
Electrician Kyle Collins measures mounting rails for new solar panels atop the home of Bob and Gladys Shepard.


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Carbon reduction

Messiah college has removed tons of carbon from the atmosphere since 2008 – reducing our contribution to global climate change:

  • 38{0b7da518931e2dc7f5435818fa9adcc81ac764ac1dff918ce2cdfc05099e9974} reduction in CO2 emissions since 2008
  • 19,706 Metric Tons of CO2 in 2008
  • 12,205.58 metric tons of CO2 in 2017

PCG infographics

Electric vehicle charging station

Since its installation in October 2017, Messiah’s EV charging station has:

  • Reduced 127 kilograms of greenhouse gas emissions by supporting electric vehicles (the equivalent of planting 3 trees).
  • Contributed 1,060 miles of fossil fuel-free driving

Local food sourcing

Dining Services receives 95{0b7da518931e2dc7f5435818fa9adcc81ac764ac1dff918ce2cdfc05099e9974} of its products from vendors located within 200 miles of Messiah’s campus resulting in energy and fossil fuel savings.

Solar energy

More than 100 solar panels on the student residences that comprise the North (residence hall) Complex generate enough energy to heat water for all three buildings, making this the fourth largest solar thermal system in the country. Messiah’s energy savings from this project is equivalent to planting 3,600 trees each year.

  • The Clifford L. Jones Solar Scholars Pavilion generates enough power to offset energy usage in a single computer lab in Frey Hall academic building. The structure is student-designed and constructed.

PCG infographics

Combined Heat, Cooling and Power Plant

Constructed in 2016, the College’s new combined cooling, heat and power plant (CCHP) procides year-round electric power, heat and cooling generated from a single fuel source–natural gas. Messiah’s recent conversion to natural gas and the use of the CCHP, is estimated to provide emission reductions equivalent to removing 1,354 passenger vehicles from the road.

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