Archive for the ‘Solar’ category

Zero Down Solar Lease Comes to Southern Colorado

February 1st, 2011

Solar energy is coming to Xcel Energy customers in a whole new way for homeowners looking to save money on their electricity bills. Today, getting a solar power system for the home is just about as easy as purchasing a book on Amazon, and is more affordable than ever before. Sungevity, the California-based company that’s behind the national campaign to get solar on the White House, has “virtually” arrived in (Pick one – Chaffee, Lake, Summit and Saguache, Conejos & Alamosa County ) to roll-out its one-of-a-kind online solar home solution.

The online approach is an ideal way for people who are thinking about – but never wanted to be hassled with – the planning of a solar home solution. Sungevity makes it as easy as a click-of-the-mouse to secure the best lease for solar energy in the market.

In three easy steps, homeowners can log onto Sungevity.com, receive a firm “iQuote,” see what the solar panels will look like on their roof using a mash-up of satellite and aerial imagery, sign a contract using electronic signatures and schedule an installation – all paid for with a no-money-down lease.

By using solar energy, Sungevity estimates that most homeowners can save 15 percent off their electricity bills from day one and have a new residential solar panel system on their roofs, and qualified buyers for 0 down, giving owners the satisfaction of using clean energy and saving money to boot.

Sungevity pioneered the ability to accurately engineer and design a solar system for the home without making a site visit. The Sungevity approach uses satellite and aerial photos to size and design the solar system within 24 hours. Solar consultants from Sungevity are available to speak to potential customers from 9 a.m. – 9 p.m. PST, seven days a week, toll-free at 866.SUN4ALL. Finally, local contractor Eco Depot USA has has partnered with Sungevity to then perform the installation.

“The time is right to bring the simple, pain-free approach to getting a solar solution for your home,” said Eco Depot USA Founder, Curtis Scheib. “The online approach is an ideal way for people who are thinking about – but never wanted to be hassled with – the planning of a solar home solution. Sungevity makes it as easy as a click-of-the-mouse to secure the best lease for solar energy in the market.”

Sungevity processes all the paperwork and takes all the hassle out of going solar, with an operating lease that includes a performance guarantee for the system plus complete maintenance including cleaning and insurance.

About Sungevity:

Sungevity (www.sungevity.com) is the leading online residential solar company and uses the power of the Internet to help homeowners start powering their homes with clean energy. The company is the first to take the hassle out of researching, planning and installing a solar panel system by allowing consumers to place their order in the same way they would plan a vacation or purchase a set of golf clubs: online. With satellite imagery perfectly capturing rooftops, who needs a site visit to plan a system and deliver a quote?

With the Sungevity Solar Lease homeowners likely save 15 percent or more on their electricity bills from day one and the savings grow each year. Gone are the days of spending thousands of dollars to install a home system. Today, qualified consumers can pay zero money down and a low monthly payment to lease a system from Sungevity for 20 years, with the option of extending that lease for an additional 5 years at lease-end. With a Sungevity Solar Lease, all maintenance, monitoring, cleaning, and insurance is taken care of.

Sungevity has designed a unique online sales process to make it easy and affordable for homeowners to go solar. Sungevity’s Solar Lease offer gives most customers savings from the start. For most the electricity bill savings start immediately and increase over time. Sungevity has an easy online “iQuote” process, which enables Sungevity to furnish customers with a firm proposal to use solar power with no capital cost within 24 hours.    http://www.sungevity.com/get-your-iquote?referral-code=ecodepot

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SOS: Schools on Solar

October 14th, 2010
School Solar Systems: Renewable Energy World Logo

Read the full article here or RenewableEnergyWorld.com

Original article by Preston Roper, Tioga Energy
Some paraphrasing by Mike Brown, Eco Depot USA

There is an SOS coming from communities across the nation: Save Our Schools. With the rise of new financing tools like power purchase agreements (PPAs)and the right support from the public and politicians, we believe we have an answer: Schools On Solar.

Schools nationwide are in dire fiscal straits and have been forced to make hard financial decisions to stay afloat — usually by shutting down an increasingly comprehensive list of classes, skimping on materials and shutting down operations.

We believe that solar power options like PPAs can recharge our ailing schools and not only save them money, but also help plan regular, measured payments that put resources and financial support back into schools’ hands.

Traditionally, implementing solar systems at educational facilities presents a laundry list of problems: many public schools don’t have the available resources to make use of capital budgets, can’t gain the support for bond measures including solar systems or can’t run a buying process on existing staffing and budgets in order to purchase and maintain a solar installation. RFP management, architectural design and proper evaluation of alternative energy paths are time-consuming and expensive, making it difficult to go solar. The costs and efforts of system maintenance and monitoring — combined with uncertainty around system generation — further complicate the process.

These contributing factors all cause administrators and facility managers to be initially cautious and slow to move on investments like solar energy.

But we have found that these same administrators are financially creative people who understand the financial benefits of solar. And they want to see progress. Their bottom line is often that solar companies have to deliver more than an environmentally-friendly project. They have to be financially sound and save the district money from day one.

Enter PPAs

PPAs can help schools precisely predict what their power costs can be — through fixed cost energy pricing — so they can better gage spending that might otherwise go to increased electricity costs.

Under the proper utility tariff and utilizing the available tax and rebate incentives, PPA providers can offer schools a rate of power that’s competitive with existing utility rates. Meanwhile, PPA providers handle the outsourcing of contractors and financing, removing extra labor on their behalf.

New options like PPAs make for a strong start.

For more infromation contact:

Mike Brown, Eco Depot USA
mbrown@ecodepotusa.com

www.ecodepotusa.com

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Treasury’s Renewable Energy Grant Program Set To Expire At Year’s End

October 14th, 2010

An article by Rachel Z. Azoff for Multifamily Executive magazine which is devoted to News and business strategies for apartment and condo owners, managers, and developers reminds us that time is running out for green energy funding.

It’s important for us to note that this applies to individual home owners as well.

Green experts recommend taking advantage of the green funding source before it’s too late.

Time is quickly running out to use a powerful federal incentive aimed at greening commercial properties.

The Department of Treasury’s Section 1603 federal renewable energy grant program, enacted as part of the American Recovery and Reinvestment Act of 2009, is scheduled to expire at the end of the year. To take advantage of the program, developers must either break ground on a project by December 31, 2010, or incur 5 percent of the total project cost by the end of the year and complete the building by the end of 2011. The grant applies to both new construction and retrofits and can go towards a variety of sustainable technologies including solar, fuel cells, wind turbines, and geothermal heat pumps.

“The grant has been a tremendous success, helping with the adoption and investment of solar technology at a time when the market for tax credits and overall demand for capital improvements has been down,” says Mike Hall, CEO of Borrego Solar Systems, a San Diego-based solar installer. “If there’s a project that developers are contemplating or in the planning stages on and need [this] grant in order for it work, they need to accelerate the [development] time line.”

While there is a slim chance that the grant program could be extended, Hall warns developers not to count on it. “There seems to be some political will to extend the program, but it hasn’t happened yet.”

Complete article here (although this was all the important stuff)

For more information contact:

Mike Brown, Eco Depot USA
mbrown@ecodepotusa.com

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Nonprofits find ways to pay for renewable energy

May 6th, 2010

DENVER

By CATHERINE TSAI

The Upper Scioto Valley School District in Ohio, battered by a slowdown at a nearby Ford Motor Co. plant, wanted to explore alternative energy when it developed a plan to fix its budget and create jobs.

It had a square mile of land where it could put wind turbines and tap some of the best wind resources in the state. It just needed the money.

That’s where Boulder, Colo.-based NexGen Energy Partners came in.

NexGen builds and maintains onsite wind and solar systems for customers, sparing them construction and maintenance costs. Using renewable energy grants and credits to defray its costs, it makes money selling power to customers over long-term contracts.

NexGen erected two 100-kilowatt turbines for Upper Scioto Valley schools, which paid $35,000 in upfront costs for some of the power and an engineering fee, Assistant Superintendent Jim Bowser said. The district projects the turbines will save it about $1.7 million over 15 years on utility bills.

“Are we breaking even? You bet. And we’re making money,” Bowser said.

The district is looking at adding more turbines, a solar power system, and possibly turning biomass into energy with other corporate partners.

Having someone else build a renewable energy system and buying just the power is becoming more common for nonprofits, businesses and local governments and agencies looking to switch to wind or solar. The model makes the most sense when customers own the properties where equipment is installed, where they pay high utility rates for conventional power, and when projects can qualify for incentives or tax credits.

Schools and other government entities don’t qualify for tax credits, but 14 states allow third parties that aren’t a regulated utility to sell power, according to the Database of State Incentives for Renewable Energy, or DSIRE. Those third parties often qualify.

“It’s the only way government incentives can effectively be used,” said MP2 Capital CEO Mark Lerdal. The San Francisco-based solar project developer has a power purchase agreement with the city-owned Denver International Airport, where it owns and operates a new solar power system.

There are other options for minimizing upfront costs. Eighteen states allow loan programs where homeowners or businesses pay off the costs of a solar project over time through a special assessment on property, according to DSIRE.

“It’s really interesting to see how much innovation is happening in the clean energy space in terms of financing,” said Karlynn Cory, the renewable energy finance team lead at the National Renewable Energy Laboratory in Golden, Colo. “It’s helping to accelerate the pace of development.”

The key for NexGen is finding projects where it can build on site, with no need for complex transmission systems to deliver power.

“If we can deliver energy on site, whether it’s a school, college or small town, all that infrastructure is already in place. We just have to bring in the actual equipment. We don’t have to build tens of millions of lines,” said NexGen President John Brown, formerly of NREL.

The private company, founded in 2007, doesn’t reveal its finances but said it was profitable last year and is on track to make a profit this year. It has about two dozen customers in Ohio, California, Kansas and Hawaii, said Ted Rose, vice president of business development and public affairs.

Partners invested $20 million in NexGen last year and could invest about $30 million this year, Brown said.

For years, Eldorado Artesian Springs Inc. in Louisville, Colo., wanted to add renewable energy, but paying about $400,000 to install its own solar panels was never an option, Chief Financial Officer Cathy Shoenfeld said.

NexGen has provided Eldorado with solar panels that should generate close to half of the bottled water company’s electricity needs. Under a multiyear contract, NexGen will sell the power to the company at rates comparable to what the utility Xcel Energy charges. (Xcel also generates some of its power from renewable sources.)

“It’s not going to cost us any more than what we would pay for power from Xcel,” Shoenfeld said. “In a situation like this, there’s really not a lot of risk.”

Links:

http://www.businessweek.com/ap/financialnews/D9FFE24O1.htm

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Markey introduces energy tax credit

November 23rd, 2009

This bill has the potential to trickle down to all of us and will cut costs of renewable energy and create jobs.

betsy_markeyOn November 20, Congresswoman Betsy Markey was today joined by Congressman Erik Paulsen (R-MN) in introducing the Renewable Electricity Integration Tax Credit Act (REITC), which will provide a tax credit for utilities to integrate more wind and solar into their energy portfolios.

“Our corner of Colorado is today what Silicon Valley was in the 1980s,” [said] Rep. Markey. “We are on the cusp of a revolution in American energy production that will break our dependence on foreign oil and take control of the way we power America. People will look to Colorado as a leader because we’ve been doing it longer and better than anybody else. It’s time for America to take back control of our energy, our security, and our jobs.”

Read the whole story here.

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Chipotle chain will become the largest solar power producer in industry

October 21st, 2009

Chipotle, already one of my favorite fast food restaurants, has earned more points with me. Is this another sign that Colorado is becoming the model state for renewable, sustainable energy? Chipotle’s headquarters is based in Denver.

From TreeHugger.com we got this:

Here’s one more reason to feel good about heading out to Chipotle for a burrito: The Denver-based Mexican restaurant chain has just announced that is making a big solar power push, partnering with Standard Renewable Energy to install solar panels at approximately 75 of its restaurants over the next year:

20,500 Tons of CO2 Avoided Annually
Installation of the solar panels is currently underway in Denver, Colorado and Austin, Dallas, and San Antonio, Texas. All together, Chipotle says the solar power initiative is expected to avoid some 20,500 tons of CO2 emissions of the life of the project — and that when completed Chipotle can boast being the largest direct producer of solar power in the restaurant industry.

Keep in mind, that’s not all of the restaurants’ electricity usage, but it’s certainly a good start.

Eco-Commitment Extends Beyond Food Sourcing
Touting his restaurants’ green efforts, Chipotle founder and co-CEO Steve Ellis said,

Our effort to change the way people think about and eat fast food began with our commitment to serving food made with ingredients from more sustainable sources. Today we’re following a similar path in the way we design and build restaurants, looking for more environmentally friendly building materials and systems that make our restaurants more efficient.

Regarding the eco-friendly building materials part: Chipotle soon will have three LEED-certified buildings in its chain, one in Illinois (with an on-site wind turbine), one in Long Island, and one in Minneapolis (pending certification).

Links

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Sustainability summit in Salida, Colorado

October 14th, 2009

The Mountain Mail front page included an article today announcing The Chaffee County Renewable Energy Planning Initiative summit October 15 in Salida, Colorado. Kathryn Wadsworth of Incite Consulting, LLC says this summit is the public involvement component.

Businesses, non-profits, government, and academia may attend a presentation from 9:00 to 10:30 a.m. by Don Marostica, Colorado Department of Economic Development and International Trade director. Marostica will talk about renewable energy economic development for Chaffee County, Colorado.

Other meetings scheduled for the day include a sustainability round table from 1:00 to 4:30 and the Renewable Energy Economic Summit from 6:00 to 8:30 p.m.

The round table  will include organizations with reservations. They currently include: the towns of Poncha Springs, Buena Vista, and Salida, representative from Chaffee County, Southwest Conservation Corps, Colorado Mountain College, Chaffee Citizens for Sustainability, Mt. Princeton Geothermal, Peak Solar Designs, Saguache County and Custer County Conservation District.

According the The Mountain Mail article the Renewable Energy Economic Summit  (at 6:00) is open to the public and will “feature discussion about the energy economy, geothermal resources and energy supplier programs and incentives.”

Related links:

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NABCEP reports record increase in test takers

October 8th, 2009

The North American Board of Certified Energy Practitioners (NABCEP) reported in September 2009 an all time record of certification exams from the Spring 2009. This is an indicator that going green is continuing to be grow in popularity.

From the NABCEP website:

The September 2009 NABCEP Photovoltaic and Solar Thermal Installer Certification exams saw a record number of applicants: 455 people in 19 sites across the U.S. sat for the exams. The Spring 2009 exams, offered at 14 sites, was administered to 199 test-takers. That’s a 129% increase from the Spring to the Fall exams.

Here’s a rundown of the top states:

California-71
Texas–56
Colorado–47
New York–44
North Carolina–36
Minnesota–29
Illinois-29
New Jersey–28
Massachusetts–25
Ohio-23

The NABCEP provides an application on their website that finds certified installers in given areas.  EcoDepotUSA’s Curtis Scheib is the only one listed as certified within Salida, Colorado.

According to the Colorado Solar Energy Industries Association “Find a Solar Installer Near You” application, among solar installers within the I-70 corridor there are only seven installers certified to install both solar hot water systems and solar electric systems. Eco Depot USA is one of them.

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Sage, is it the new green?

October 6th, 2009

There’s been some discussion about folks getting tired of the “green” movement. There has even been some talk that sage is the new green. The word sage implies an intelligent green.

A quick search on Google for “sage versus green” finds about 160 million hits. On the first page we find a couple of companies, one called Sage Environmental Services and another called Sage Green. The first sells environmentally responsible services that include: green cleaning, natural yard care, green living guides, and green shopping. The other sells reusable shopping bags with customized logos.

Another site that comes up is a political forum on a topic called: Somthing to GROUSE about ! Windopower vs. Sage Grouse pits Green vs. Green. The debate here is about how wind farms harm bird migrations and how landscape is being harmed.

Point is terminology is important when describing what “green” really means. Seems like lots of folks are capitalizing on the warm-fuzzy feel-good of being “green.” While others are saying that people who are looking for sustainable alternatives are actually harming the environment.

What does being “green” really mean?

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Eco Depot USA Sustainable Living Fair in Ft. Collins, Colorado

September 25th, 2009

Mike Brown from Eco Depot USA sent the following info about the Sustainable Living Fair along with the pics in this slide show.

“We spoke with over 300 serious people about reducing their carbon footprint. Fair attendence was over 5000 with 200 vendors. Saturday was beautiful, Sunday a storm blew in. Curtis Scheib (our Renewable Energy Expert) taught a hands on RE (Renewable Energy) course for the Fair. The traler mounted Kestrel e 600 watt off grid / battery charging wind turbine was a huge success.”

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