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ALBANY — The Dougherty County Commission on Monday approved a solar farm on a 1,089-acre tract of farmland generally located north and northeast of the intersection of Moultrie Road and Spring Flat Road. Dougherty County Solar LLC, an associate of NEXTera Energy, requested the commission approve rezoning the land from AG (agricultural district) to a special agriculture zoning exception.

NEXTera will build a 120-megawatt solar farm on the land. The power generated by the facility will be sold to Georgia Power.

The company already has three similar facilities in Georgia in Taylor, Burke and Candler counties. Project Manager Stephen Land said the proposed $300 million project will involve the installation of more than 440,000 solar collectors, which would rotate to track the sun.

The project was tabled until Monday to allow the board to hear input from Daniel Geller, a county extension associate from the University of Georgia

“This technology is here to stay,” Geller said. “The farm will be there for 30 years. The power it will produce is cheaper and cleaner than coal. It’s safe and the only concern is aesthetics. Georgia is currently sixth in the country in new solar power installations.”

The county will make money from the resell to Georgia Power.

“I liken it to pouring water into the river, and it will have absolutely no impact on the people living near it,” Geller added. “Dougherty County needs to get on the train now because it is an economic development for rural Georgia.”

County Commission Chairman Chris Cohilas agreed.

“There is virtually no maintenance and it has a far lower overhead than coal,” he said.

There are a lot of advantages to solar panels and, economically, now is a good time to invest in solar technology, Geller noted.

NEXTera officials said taxes on the facility will pump more than $10 million in revenue to county coffers over the life of the project.

In other action items the commission:

— Approved a resolution providing for the filing of a grant application with the Georgia Department of Transportation for the purpose of providing funds for the design and construction of a segment of the Flint River Trails Master Plan designated as the Chehaw Connector connecting Chehaw Park across the Philema Road bridge to Cox Landing, the Riverfront Trail and Downtown Albany. The city and county will contribute $250,000 each, and the state will add an additional $1.1 million to the project;

— OK’d the acceptance of the required Resolution updating the authorized signers on county Suntrust business accounts;

— Accepted a required resolution updating and authorizing 9-1-1 charges on telephone services.



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sun shining through

In our cover feature for Sept/Oct, we look at the inefficiencies in local permitting and interconnection processes that are holding back solar energy adoption in pockets across the country. Check out the full feature here. On the flip side of the issues noted are communities making an effort to revise out-dated wording and ineffective practices, guided in large part by SolSmart, a U.S. Department of Energy funded recognition program for communities that have taken steps to reduce solar costs and barriers and promote solar adoption. Here are three of our favorite examples.

Buying Power

Goshen, Ind., achieved the SolSmart Gold designation and installed 103 watts of solar PV per capita, placing it ahead of places like Sacramento, Denver and San Francisco in 2017. The big hit here was organizing a Solarize Northern Indiana group-buy to bring down both grid-connected and off-grid system costs. The average cost of an array under Solarize is $2.53 per watt for a basic 5-kW system, compared to about $2.80 per watt on the open market, according to a report by Solarize. (Note: Indiana halted all of this momentum at the state level by ending net metering completely.)


Collaboration Nation

SolSmart cities seeing the most success are often clustered and collaborative. In Illinois, the Metropolitan Mayors Caucus (MMC) advised 15 municipalities and counties and successfully led them all to Gold, Silver or Bronze SolSmart designations. As of the spring of 2018, this represented the largest regional cohort of designees in the country, tying Illinois with Colorado for the largest total number of SolSmart designations (18 total statewide).

Key to this process were bi-weekly phone calls with all communities and a Dropbox system arranged to share resources. This way everyone could get on the same page and share best practices while still tailoring programs to address local nuances. The reps from Schaumburg, Ill., rewrote zoning codes to create clear solar guidelines based on communication during the SolSmart designation phase that also met community goals and aesthetic standards.

Beach Park and Schaumburg achieved SolSmart Gold and Silver designations by making online solar permitting checklists available, allowing solar by-right in their zoning codes, training permitting and inspection staff on solar, and creating a streamlined process to approve solar permits more quickly. Schaumburg and Beach Park also received points for informing its residents of local incentives, solar installers and financing options.


Starting from square one

Right at the southern tip of Texas at the Mexican border is the city of Brownsville. The population is around 200,000 people in the low to moderate income bracket, emphasis on the low. The community was in such a dire spot and in need of a boost that federal organizations from FEMA to the EPA to the DOE were brought in to help.

“We looked holistically at what can we do to improve overall and become more resilient,” said David Licon Jr., an engineer for the City of Brownsville. “Solar was always an idea here. We thought we could help [the low-income community] out if we could get the ball rolling, dispel the illusions around solar and maybe help some of our citizens struggling with that high energy bill each month — make things more sustainable in the long haul.”

Brownsville could check no boxes on the early adopter SolSmart checklist — nothing in its zoning ordinance, and no real way to get through permitting — so they started with basics. The first step was getting on the same page with the three utility companies in town.

“We were fortunate our utilities came to the table to talk about it. That’s a must,” Licon said. “We can only make suggestions, so that relationship paid dividends to get everyone on the same page.”
This led to the utilities all putting standardized applications online while working toward a three- to five-day turnaround.

The city’s zoning ordinances now allowing “by right accessory use,” which limits the number of reviews from submission to installation. The city also created a permitting process for solar so that it goes through the appropriate reviews and isn’t a slow case-by-case process avoids run-around between city and utility company.

“The next thing as we progressed forward, is communication,” Licon said. “Once we told the public what we wanted to do we have had nothing but support. Once we put a sticker on our website asking if people wanted solar, we started getting calls the next day. We are pushing. We don’t want to just facilitate; we want our own skin in the game.”

In the past year, Brownsville has seen a 200 to 300 percent growth in solar installs compared to previous year. That’s from a small number, but it’s a start and it’s a direct result from city initiatives. Licon says the next focus is vetting the solar companies coming into the area. “What guidelines do we need to protect homeowners from fly-by-night contractors? If we get momentum we don’t want people coming in to scam.”

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BUCHANAN, NY – Congresswoman Nita Lowey, D-Harrison, toured Continental Building Products’ Buchanan plant Monday to observe its clean energy efforts and to make the case for aggressive federal investment in renewable energy. Working with Manhattan-based EnterSolar, Continental Building Products — a construction manufacturing company headquartered in Virginia — is in the process of installing more than 250,000 square feet of solar cells on the roof of their Buchanan plant.

The solar array project, expected to be completed in the fall, will be the state’s largest. While at the plant, which employs 110 people and is next door to Indian Point, Lowey was briefed on the solar panels being installed on the roof, as well as the products made at the plant, including drywall that is 99 percent recycled material.

“Continental Building Products’ cutting-edge facility in Buchanan is a terrific example of how sustainable building will protect the environment, increase energy efficiency, and save homeowners money,” Lowey said. “It was a pleasure to tour this facility and to experience firsthand its work to promote sustainability and the new energy economy. In Congress, I will continue leading the fight for federal investments in clean and renewable energy sources.”

As the highest-ranking Democrat on the Appropriations Committee, Lowey secured $2.078 billion in the FY2018 Omnibus for the Office of Energy Efficiency and Renewable Energy, including $55 million for concentrating solar power research and development.

Photo credit: Courtesy.

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Energy costs are a major component in any housing environment, and one of the main areas where boards and managers look at to optimize efficiency and save money. One already popular — and growing — alternative to fossil fuels is solar energy. But how much solar can conceivably be produced in an urban environment, and how much will it really save?

Solar Efficiency

Those of us unfamiliar with the technology of solar energy might think that it’s a warm weather, ‘sunny days only’ source of energy. But in fact, “cold doesn’t hurt the efficiency of solar energy,” says Brian Haug, a solar energy specialist with Continental Electrical Construction Company, which has offices in Illinois. “As a matter of fact, solar works better when it’s cooler.” (More on that later!) The efficiency of solar is more dependent on the angle of the solar panels than how hot or cold the environment is.

Alan Burchell, Founder and Principal of Urbanstrong, an alternative energy firm located in Brooklyn, expounds on that idea: “The way to determine solar power generation efficiency is through a test called a solar shade analysis. This test measures these factors on an annual basis, providing the best positioning for the array.  The test will also determine whether a solar array is feasible for a particular roof,” to begin with.

So clearly, solar is not as simple as it looks. “If a co-op or condo wants solar on their building in an urban setting,” says Haug, “there are a few challenges. One is that rooftops are typically small, though a flat roof does not make a difference in efficiency. A smaller rooftop will limit the size of the solar array you can put there.”  He adds that “with fewer sunny days, you may rely on other technologies too.” Solar will not meet 100 percent of your building’s energy needs. The question is, how much of your needs can be met by solar? The generally held consensus among solar professionals we spoke with is that solar can supply between 10 and 15 percent of a multifamily building’s energy needs.

How Does Your Solar Array Work?



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Q&A: Shining X-ray light on perovskites for better solar cells

Four scientists discuss X-ray experiments at SLAC’s synchrotron that reveal new insights into how a promising solar cell material forms.

  • Credit: Angela Anderson/SLAC National Accelerator Laboratory

    From left, Stanford PhD student Aryeh Gold-Parker, and Chris Tassone, Kevin Stone and Mike Toney of the Stanford Synchrotron Radiation Lightsource.


Named after a mineral discovered in the Ural Mountains of Russia, perovskites have taken center stage as a class of materials with properties that could be applied to future electronics and energy devices.

Semiconducting films made of perovskites promise flexible, light-weight solar cells that are cheap and easily made from abundant materials. While they are not yet available commercially – hurdles include making them more stable and durable – they may transform the solar energy industry in the next decade or two.

For scientists, perovskites also present an interesting puzzle: Start with any number of variations on the basic ingredients for making them – lead, iodide and methylammonium – and you end up with the same basic material. Yet, tweaks to the chemistry at various stages in the process can lead to perovskites with more desirable qualities for solar cells.

For researchers at the Stanford Synchrotron Radiation Lightsource (SSRL) and Stanford University, the mystery and potential of perovskites converge in experiments where extremely bright X-rays are used to study the chemistry of the material in the very moments it is being formed. The DOE Office of Science user facility at SLAC National Accelerator Laboratory offers multiple ways to approach the problem and discover new insights about this useful material.

We asked SSRL staff scientists Christopher Tassone and Kevin Stone, Stanford Chemistry PhD student Aryeh Gold-Parker and Michael Toney, head of the SSRL materials science division, what they recently found out about perovskite chemistry and where they are hoping their work will lead.

Their research was published today in Nature Communications.

How are perovskites made, and what interests you about this process?

Stone: You start by dissolving some basic ingredients in a solvent. Then you deposit that solution and dry it into a film. The film is then transformed into the final perovskite by a treatment such as annealing, which involves heating it to a certain temperature and then cooling it again. We are interested in the chemistry of that entire process and how it evolves at each stage. The idea is that if you can understand what we call the “formation chemistry” of perovskites, you can create the materials to have the exact properties you desire.

Gold-Parker: There are dozens of different methods for depositing perovskite films, for example. And these methods lead to differences in thickness, texture, grain size and crystallinity of the films. In the lab, creating perovskites with distinctive characteristics is mostly done through trial and error. Engineers make small changes to the process to optimize the particular property they’re interested in, whether that’s solar cell voltage or performance. Trial and error can work, but it’s not efficient.

Tassone: My group is really interested in how we make large quantities of solar panels very cheaply to meet growing demands for solar power and clean energy goals. Conventional silicon solar cells can’t be manufactured rapidly enough. We believe that if we can understand the chemical transformations that are occurring during the process of making perovskite solar cells, we can ultimately engineer better processes that meet the needs of industry.

What was your latest study about?

Gold-Parker: Our study builds on work by other groups of researchers at Oxford, Cornell and Stanford that showed using chlorine in the processing can lead to high-quality perovskite films with impressive performance. After the solution is deposited there’s an intermediate step where a crystalline film forms – we call this a precursor – and then a gaseous salt of chlorine called methylammonium chloride (MACI) leaves the film continually while it’s converting into a perovskite. A few years ago, an SSRL study by myself, Toney and co-workers showed there is very little chlorine left in the final product. Even though you start with quite a lot of chlorine, the vast majority of it is lost in the processing.

Stone:  In this latest study we wanted to know: Where does the chlorine go and what purpose does it serve? Why chlorine in the first place? What does the precursor consist of, and how is it influencing this transformation?

What did you find out?

Stone: We were able to figure out what the structure of that crystalline precursor is, how the atoms are put together, and roughly how much chlorine is present. When we heat it up during the annealing stage, we see that crystalline precursor persists for quite a while before it begins to transform into perovskite.

Gold-Parker: We were also able to show that the transformation into the final perovskite is limited by the gradual evaporation of MACl, and that this slow transformation might actually lead to a higher quality perovskite material.

Toney: There are also broader implications. Theory calculations can tell you with good accuracy the properties your material will have. But they provide almost no guidance about how to go about synthesizing it. This question has driven interest in the science community over many decades, but even more so over the last five years, in what’s been called synthesis science: understanding how you actually make something. What are the processes that the material goes through, the pathways? This study is one very nice example of being able to disentangle that synthesis process, and as a result gain insight into how we could redesign it.

How did you study it?

Tassone: We used multiple versions of two techniques called X-ray scattering and X-ray spectroscopy. X-ray scattering is used to study structure; it tells you where the atoms are located in crystalline materials. X-ray spectroscopy is a complementary technique. It tells you about the chemistry of the film, how much of the different chemical elements are present and how they are bonded.

Gold-Parker: These methods allowed us to probe changes in the crystal structure and the amount of chlorine throughout the transformation, as well as the chemical state of the chlorine. And very importantly, we used each of those techniques in situ – or as the changes are actually occurring. SSRL has world-class capabilities for designing and performing these sorts of in situ experiments that monitor the actual process instead of just the starting and end points, and that was really powerful.

Tassone: What makes this result and our approach very strong is that we use the interpretation of the scattering data to inform the interpretation of the spectroscopy data, and vice versa. We would not have solved this mechanism without moving those things together. In the paper we lay out a clear pathway for anyone who wants to study the processes involved in making this or other materials. This is an important step in perovskites research but also in the broader field of synthesis science that Mike described.

What’s next?

Stone: I would like to study what happens in the solution before it dries, so at an earlier stage in the process. I would also like to expand our methods to include other perovskite materials.

Toney: Another point to pursue is related to the role of the chlorine that’s present in the film in this specific example.  It serves as a mediator or regulator, and it slows down the conversion. How does this general concept of a mediator – a compound that serves a purpose but does not end up in your final material – work in this process or other processes or materials? Silicon has been studied for at least 50 years, perovskites for five, so we’ve got a lot of work ahead of us.

Tassone: I have two points for moving forward. One is how do we develop the processes that will work at scale and allow solar to be affordable to everyone and really make a large impact on our energy landscape? The other is, based on the fact that perovskites are the most exciting semiconductor development in the last decade or two, how can we utilize the unique properties of this material for other applications as well? 

Other contributors to this research include SSRL’s Vanessa Pool, Eva Unger of Lund University in Sweden and Stanford University’s Andrea Bowring and Michael McGehee, now at University of Colorado Boulder. Funding was provided by the DOE Office of Science, the National Science Foundation (Graduate Research Fellowship) and the Marcus and Amalia Wallenberg Foundation.


Citation: K.H. Stone, et al., Nature Communications, 27 August 2018 (10.1038/s41467-018-05937-4)


SLAC is a multi-program laboratory exploring frontier questions in photon science, astrophysics, particle physics and accelerator research. Located in Menlo Park, Calif., SLAC is operated by Stanford University for the U.S. Department of Energy’s Office of Science. For more information, please visit slac.stanford.edu.

SLAC National Accelerator Laboratory is supported by the Office of Science of the U.S. Department of Energy. The Office of Science is the single largest supporter of basic research in the physical sciences in the United States, and is working to address some of the most pressing challenges of our time. For more information, please visit science.energy.gov.



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All these utilities are going to accomplish with punitive pricing and other predatory practices against distributed solar systems is to make themselves so hated that when grid defection becomes feasible (as in cheap home storage) they’ll see mass defection. Like the cable companies experienced.

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Solarize Atlanta has extended the deadline for homeowners and businesses seeking to apply for affordable bulk solar panel purchasing.

Homeowners and businesses in Atlanta now have until Oct. 31 to sign up for the program to access free rooftop evaluations.

“We needed over a thousand sign-ups to get there and I think we are pretty close,” said Jeanette Gayer, director at Environment Georgia, one of the organizations supporting the program.

Some 49 residential customers within the city of Atlanta have already signed contracts, while 736 others have signed up for free evaluations.

Once property owners sign up, residential applicants have until Dec. 31 to sign contracts while the deadline for commercial customers has been extended to April 2019.

Gayer said the program hopes to encourage businesses and residential customers in the state to consider the benefits of installing solar panels their rooftops.

“I think the program is accomplishing what we wanted. It’s giving the people of Atlanta a chance to kick the tires of solar, become more comfortable with the idea and then take the step to actually put it in their own roof,” said Gayer.

The program works this way; the more people who sign up for the program within a community, the lower the cost of installation.

“We do research on all the different materials that we are putting in to a program and we also make it easier because we negotiate the bulk price to make it easier for people to put in solar,” said Gayer.

Old Fourth Ward residents Ruth and Larry Menter were the first beneficiaries to the program in the city of Atlanta. They completed installing solar panels and a battery for their home less than a month ago.

After an investment of about $20,000, the couple, hope to cut their energy costs by half in coming months.

“The renewable energy side of it and reducing carbon emissions was probably the No. 1 reason we were looking to do it,” said Ruth Menter.

Gayer hopes communities within the city take advantage of the bulk purchasing savings and the tax credits available to sign up before the deadline expires.

The City of Atlanta’s office of Resilience supports Solarize Atlanta efforts in encouraging the market for rooftop solar panels.

“Programs like Solarize Atlanta are critical to reaching out clean energy goals,” said Amol Naik, the city’s chief resilience officer.

Solar contributes 6 percent of the city’s energy needs.








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A coal powered plant near Centralia, Wash., is set to shut down completely by 2025. (Kid Klutch/Flickr)

A coal powered plant near Centralia, Wash., is set to shut down completely by 2025. (Kid Klutch/Flickr)

August 27, 2018

CENTRALIA, Wash. – With an initiative on the November ballot to charge carbon polluters, supporters are pointing to Southwest Washington as an example of how the measure could help workers.

Initiative 1631 would put a fee on the state’s largest polluters, such as oil companies, and use part of that money to invest in clean energy infrastructure.

Centralia and the surrounding communities are facing this transition right now as their coal plant is set to shut down completely by 2025, taking about 200 jobs with it.

Bob Guenther, president of the Thurston-Lewis-Mason Central Labor Council, says that’s a hit he hopes the clean energy economy can fill.

“The Centralia-southwest Washington region is an area that has high unemployment, has low household income, and we’re looking for a just transition from that Centralia coal plant to jobs that will be of like value to the community,” he points out.

TransAlta, owner of the coal plant, has proposed a 180-megawatt solar project on the site of the former Centralia Coal Mine. It would create 300 jobs during construction.

Guenther wants to see the region invest in other projects, such as solar panel manufacturing, to create more long term employment as well.

I-1631 would invest in training to transition workers to clean energy jobs. Opponents say the fee charged to polluters will be passed on to consumers.

David Watterson is a Tenino City Council member. When TransAlta offered funding for the transitioning region, he seized on the opportunity to get solar panels installed on top of Tenino High School.

The city also is partnering with Centralia College to offer a K-through-12 clean energy job training program.

Watterson says that’s the most important part of this transformation.

“Giving our youth an opportunity to get some training in a field where employment is skyrocketing is just a huge thing and hopefully something that can be replicated in other, smaller rural communities,” he points out. “So that’s why I’m really hoping that 1631 will make some funds available for helping our rural communities.”

Mo McBroom, director of government relations with The Nature Conservancy in Washington, says this latest effort to charge polluters has a broad coalition behind it, including businesses, tribes, labor and social justice groups.

She says the measure is centered around people and designed to create more than 40,000 jobs.

“It’s about ensuring that, as we transition, no one is left behind and there are jobs in the clean energy economy for workers who want them,” she states.

Eric Tegethoff, Public News Service – WA

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