Today, as part of President Obama's Executive Order calling on Federal agencies to lead by example in Energy, Environment, and Economic Performance, the Department of Veterans Affairs announced that they will install solar photovoltaic (PV) systems by summer 2012 at five VA medical centers in Oklahoma City; Temple, Texas; Amarillo, Texas; Loma Linda, Calif. and West Los Angeles.
The U.S. solar energy industry is booming.
In June, the Solar Energy Industries Association and GTM Research released the U.S. Solar Market Insight: 1st Quarter 2011 report showing that in the last three years the U.S. solar industry has gone from a start-up to a major industry that is creating well-paying jobs and growing the economy in all 50 states.
Solar's robust growth in the past years has been the result of a very favorable combination of new, innovative business models, affordability for consumers, rapidly decreasing manufacturing costs, and most importantly, a strong commitment from the Obama Administration and other policymakers in Washington.
In the first quarter of 2011, the solar industry installed 252 megawatts of new solar electric capacity, a 66 percent growth from the same time frame in 2010. There are now almost 3,000 megawatts of solar electric energy installed in the U.S., enough to power 600,000 homes. In the manufacturing sector, solar panel production jumped 31 percent.
And with the growth of the solar industry, thousands of jobs have been created. In fact, solar energy creates more jobs per megawatt than any other energy source. According to the Solar Foundation’s National Solar Jobs Census, 93,000 Americans were employed in the U.S. solar industry in 2010 and that number is expected to grow between 25-50,000 this year.
The Obama Administration has taken solar energy initiatives to unprecedented levels and is leading the effort to win our clean energy future. In addition to creating American jobs, President Obama has put words to action through his call for the government to lead by example:
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Just today, The Department of Veterans Affairs (VA) announced that it will install solar photovoltaic systems by summer 2012 at five VA medical centers in Oklahoma City; Temple, Texas; Amarillo, Texas; Loma Linda, Calif. and West Los Angeles. Prior to this announcement the VA has also awarded nearly $78 million in contracts to build solar panels at its facilities with a goal to derive 15 percent of its annual electricity usage from renewable sources by 2013.
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The Department of Energy has issued loan guarantees for solar power projects and manufacturing facilities that will create more than 26,000 jobs.
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The Department of the Interior has approved permits for solar power projects on public lands that will provide enough power for over 730,000 homes.
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The Department of Agriculture actively promotes the deployment of solar energy on farms and ranches throughout the country. The American Recovery and Reinvestment Act of 2009 extended benefits to farmers and ranchers who utilize solar systems.
And the list goes on.
The U.S. market is expected to more than double yet again in 2011, installing enough solar for more than 400,000 homes. Last year, the industry set the ambitious yet achievable goal of installing 10 gigawatts annually by 2015 – enough to power 2 million more homes each and every year. Combining continued leadership from the Administration with industry innovation that drives down cost, that goal is now within reach.
Article by Rhone Resch, President and CEO of the Solar Energy Industries Association
3 comments
Leadership by example?
When is King Oumgbama going to put back the solar panels on the White House that J. Carter put up?
What a joke~
While all this is ‘relatively’ good news, it seems to me to be a minor contribution to solving our energy problem. This type of technology (which should be in wider use) only lessens the demand on “base load” electrical generation. Since MOST people are not going to be able to afford or install PV panels the real problem is: How are we going to develop a sustainable electrical delivery system that most people will NEED to have available. (?) I’m not against “feel good” bandages, but we need to address and then ATTACK our larger power delivery dilemma.
Edward – I think the problem is that your encompassing two different constructs under one question and you’re expecting immediate results.
First, although most people cannot afford a newly installed PV system NOW, the fact is prices have been dropping steadily for YEARS and PV installs are starting to become the norm for several developers around the nation. SOON you’ll be able to acquire a complete system at Lowe’s and only need a qualified technician/electrician to hook them up.
Second, we are developing a sustainable electrical delivery system in the FORM of the Smart Grid and Virtual Utility programming, the tech of which has ALREADY proven itself this summer. These are NOT “feel good” bandages but are, in fact, working models already in SERVICE.
I’m sorry that not EVERYTHING is IMMEDIATELY AVAILABLE at your disposal and the entire world cannot be SHIFTED to true energy efficiency, but I’m sure you’re aware that some things TAKE TIME to develop and deployed. WE are not “I Dream of Jeannie” and CANNOT just blink our eyes to make all the BAD things disappear and all the GOOD things start working now.
I hope this answer satisfies your question. Now get […] and ease up on the CAPITAL LETTERS, […].
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