SEBANE News

SEBANE

  Vol. 4 No. 5

November 2006  

                    

Table of Contents

 

                    

SEIA Reports 2006 is Best Year Yet for Solar Energy

Solar energy is having a terrific year, according to a "Year in Review" report compiled by the Solar Energy Industries Association and the Prometheus Institute. The report, unveiled at the Solar Power 2006 conference in October in San Jose, Calif., attributed the industry-wide boom in the United States to rising conventional energy prices and to "the expansion of federal and state support for solar deployment."

Despite record high prices for silicon, the main ingredient in most photovoltaic wafers, the PV panel installation rate in the United States is already shooting upward -- in the past year, the installation rate grew by 20 percent, according to the report. The installation rate "will be one of the highest in the world this year as new federal and state programs begin to stimulate demand," the report said. Another year-in-review report on the industry, Michael Rogol's "Solar Annual 2006: The Gun has Gone Off", observed that the solar market has been seeing a 40 percent to 50 percent annual production expansion. "Initially, this ... raised concern that a 'glut' might reduce prices and margins," Rogol wrote. He continued that interviewing hundreds of solar energy experts "fortified our conviction that demand will significantly exceed supply through the end of the decade."

                    

Update on New England Project Funding Opportunities

Connecticut

Program is continuing with performance-based incentives implemented in June.

Massachusetts

Keyspan Energy Solar Thermal Initiative

KeySpan Energy Delivery is one of the first gas utilities in the country to provide incentives for its customers to install solar hot water heating systems as a way to save energy, promote renewable energy sources, and minimize greenhouse gas emissions. KeySpan's Solar Thermal Program encourages customers to install highly efficient solar thermal technologies in residential, commercial & industrial, and multi-family sites.

This program is currently only for KeySpan heating customers in Massachusetts and New Hampshire between May 1, 2006 and April 30, 2007. Awarded projects may be required to provide usage and/or monitoring data of their solar thermal system to KeySpan as part of their participation. Eligible Solar Thermal Installations for this program include Solar Hot Water and Space Heating, Solar Make-Up Air Heating (Transpired Solar Collector), as well as Solar Pool Heating applications.

Residential customers would receive an incentive based on 15% of the project's equipment and installation costs, up to $1,500 per house, paid to the customer upon completion. KeySpan can support 20 residential solar projects through this program between now and April 30, 2007. Commercial customers must first have a free Energy Audit in order to apply for and participate in solar benefits. This energy audit will identify applicable solar thermal recommendations, as well as estimated natural gas savings associated with the measure. KeySpan will determine the solar incentive based on projected savings from the solar installation.

Offers and Incentives are subject to change without notice. Funds for participation may be limited. Email solar@keyspanenergy.com for more information.

Massachusetts Technology Collaborative Incentives for Large and Small PV

The Massachusetts Technology Collaborative has allocated $3.5 million for Round 3 funding for renewables projects in excess of 10kW under its Large On-Site Renewables Initiative (LORI). $1 million will be reserved for PV projects, with a maximum grant of $250,000 per project. Round 3 applications will be due the end of February 2007. Applications will be available on-line in December for feasibility analyses, design, and construction.

In October 2006, MTC committed an additional $12.9 million to its Small Renewables Initiative (SRI) to take the program through June 2010. Applications for funding will be reviewed and approved on a rolling basis, at steady rate of $3.6 million per twelve month period and not to exceed $300,000 in any month. Some program guidelines and incentive levels have been changed. Information and details are available at the Mass. Technology Collaborative.

New Hampshire

Keyspan Energy Solar Thermal Initiative

This program is currently for solar thermal projects installed by KeySpan heating customers in both Massachusetts and New Hampshire between May 1, 2006 and April 30, 2007 only.

Please refer to the program description under Massachusetts above.

Vermont

In July, 2006, the Vermont Clean Energy Development Fund authorized an additional $500,000 to the Vermont Solar and Small Wind Incentive Program for incentives for renewable energy systems. In addition, the Vermont utility companies CVPS and GMP provided roughly $238,000 of incentive funds to support qualifying solar electric and solar hot water systems for customers in their service territories from their Nuclear Electric Insurance Limited and the American Nuclear Insurers funds due to the sale of their interests in the Vermont Yankee Nuclear power plant. Along with money left over from solar projects that were not completed in the previous rounds, these contributions result in a total of $980,000 of new incentive funding.

The program was opened for new reservation applications in September 2006. The Renewable Energy Resource Center (RERC), a project of the Vermont Energy Investment Corporation, administers the incentive program and provides consumer education and support services.

Information at: The Renewable Energy Resource Center

                    

New England PV Market Activity and Member News



Nation's Largest 'Brightfield' Dedicated in Brockton, MA

Federal, state and local officials, solar experts, environmentalists and community leaders gathered on October 26, 2006 to celebrate the completion of the Brockton Brightfield, a 425- kilowatt (kW) photovoltaic (PV) solar energy system located on a 3.7 acre environmentally-remediated brownfield in Brockton, Massachusetts. The project is the largest solar energy system in New England and the largest idle remediated "brownfield" transformed into a solar energy generating station in the nation. Eventually the city plans to increase the Brockton Brightfield's capacity to 1 megawatt (MW).

Global Solar Inc. designed, built, operates and maintains the Brockton Brightfield. In building the Brockton Brightfield, Global Solar used 1,395 SCHOTT Solar ASE 300 modules built at SCHOTT Solar's production facility in nearby Billerica, MA. The cost to construct the Brockton Brightfield was $3.037 million, with funding supplied by a $1.6 million city bond, $789,000 grant from the U.S. Department of Energy, and more than $1 million from the Massachusetts Technology Collaborative's Renewable Energy Trust. These organizations, along with the US Environmental Protection Agency and NiSource, also provided the city of Brockton with planning and educational grants for the project.

                    

Spire Announces Sales to Manufacturers in Germany, Taiwan, Hawaii

Spire Corporation has announced it has entered into a contract with Prosperity Solar Power, Inc. of Taipei City, Taiwan to provide Spire’s 10 MW turnkey PV module manufacturing production line.

Spire Corporation also will be providing First Solar, Inc. with eight more Spire solar simulators for a manufacturing facility First Solar is building in Germany. This brings First Solar's order to 12 solar simulators from Spire in the last year. Spire's SPI- SUN SIMULATOR 350i is used to test the electrical performance of photovoltaic modules during the manufacturing process. Spire's simulators are used in the testing and qualification of thin film modules, such as those produced by First Solar, as well as in the manufacture of the more common crystalline silicon-based modules. First Solar will incorporate the new simulators into their new, highly automated thin film solar module production line.

Hoku Solar, based in Hawaii, has announced that it has signed a contract with Spire Corporation for the purchase of a photovoltaic module production line that will enable Hoku to manufacture up to 15 megawatts (MW) of photovoltaic modules each year and is scheduled to be delivered in the first half of calendar year 2007. Hoku intends to eventually increase its module production capacity to 30 MW per year.



Spire Completes 118 kW PV System in Gloucester, MA

Spire Corporation also recently announced that it has completed the design and installation of a PV system at the office and distribution center for North Coast Seafoods. The 118-kW rooftop system will be monitored in real-time using Spire’s InSpire Solar Monitoring System, which also provides automatic data uploads to the Massachusetts Technology Collaborative’s solar energy database.

                    

GT Equipment Changes Name to
"GT Solar Incorporated"

GT Equipment Technologies, Inc. has changed its name to GT Solar Incorporated. GT's management and the company's operations at its Merrimack, NH headquarters remain unchanged. According to GT Solar CEO, Kedar Gupta, "This name change reflects the fact that most of the business we're conducting around the globe is in the PV industry. Our name now makes it clear that we are in the business of enabling technology, manufacturing and equipment solutions for the PV industry worldwide." GT Solar designs and manufactures multi-crystalline growth furnaces, reactors for poly-silicon production, turnkey PV fabrication lines for wafers/cells/modules, cell process and test equipment, and custom equipment to expand a customer's capabilities. GT also conducts R&D on silicon feedstock production, solar cell processes and crystal growth modeling.

·  GT Solar

 

                    

Heliotronics Expands School Monitoring Services

Heliotronics of Hingham, MA is expanding its monitoring services for solar school programs in Missouri, Rhode Island, and Indiana. This second round approval adds 22 monitored photovoltaic systems to the 23 installed in the first round of these programs thanks to funding from the Missouri Department of Natural Resources, Rhode Island State Energy Office, and Cinergy Corporation. The Heliotronics monitoring package includes real-time AC and DC current/voltage monitoring, in addition to tracking power, energy production, displaced emissions, wind speed, irradiance, ambient temperature, and module temperature. Data is displayed in the classroom via the fun and easy to use SunViewer(TM) educational display. The display features dynamic gauges updated once per second, which engages the students and invites further inquiry.

                    

SunPower Develops New High Efficiency Solar Panel

Recent SEBANE member SunPower Corporation, based in California, has announced its newest solar panel, offering significantly higher power output and conversion efficiency than its current products. The new SPR-315 solar panel utilizes the company's newly developed 22-percent-efficient Gen 2 solar cells and carries a rated power output of 315 watts. The new design incorporates 96 of SunPower's Gen 2 solar cells that offer improved panel efficiency through a combination of enhanced cell architecture and improved packing density. Compared with conventional solar panels, the new SPR-315 allows customers to generate up to 50 percent more power per square foot of roof area with half as many panels. The new SPR-315 solar panel is planned for commercial availability in the spring of 2007.

                    

Evergreen Solar to Supply SunEdison and Mainstream Energy

Evergreen Solar will ship approximately $200 million of photovoltaic modules to SunEdison, LLC over the next five years. SunEdison offers clients Solar Power Service Agreement (SPSA), a finance and service model that allows public, private and nonprofit organizations to buy and use solar electricity generated at their facilities without capital investment. This supports Evergreen's ultimate goal of converging the cost of solar power with retail grid pricing.

Evergreen Solar also has announced a four-year supply contract with Mainstream Energy, LLC, which has systems integration and distribution subsidiaries involved in the sales, distribution and installation of residential and commercial solar electric systems nationwide. Under the terms of the agreement, Evergreen Solar will ship approximately $100 million of photovoltaic modules to Mainstream Energy over the next four years.

The two agreements are Evergreen Solar’s fifth and sixth major contract in the past 12 months. The value of these six contracts totals more than $700 million over the next five years. The photovoltaic modules will be manufactured at Evergreen Solar’s plant in Massachusetts and at EverQ’s German factory, which is currently being expanded.

·  Evergreen Solar

 

                    

Akeena Solar Recognized for Contributions

On October 16th the town council of the Town of Los Gatos, CA presented SEBANE-member Akeena Solar, Inc. with special appreciation, commendation and thanks for outstanding contributions to the community. Akeena Solar is a leading designer and installer of solar power systems serving residential and small commercial markets nationwide. The town council cited Akeena Solar, which was founded in 2001 and became a publicly traded company in August 2006, for its commitment to producing clean electricity directly from the sun, which provides many benefits to the environment and economy. Akeena Solar is an integrator of residential and small commercial solar power systems across the United States, serving customers directly in California, New Jersey, New York, Connecticut and Pennsylvania.

                    

Solar Works Installs 121 kW System
in Lawrence, MA

Riverwalk Properties in Lawrence is the host to a new 121-kilowatt / 392 panel solar PV energy system. The Riverwalk Properties, a refurbished mill building that was once powered by hydro-power from the Merrimack River, is home to 50 tenants, in a broad range of businesses all of whom are impacted by rising energy costs. The project is a collaborative effort of Solar Works Inc.’s engineering and installation team, and is comprised primarily of Massachusetts manufactured components from Solectria Renewables LLC of Lawrence, MA and Schott Solar of Billerica, MA.

The installation will include an interpretive display in the lobby of Sal’s Pizza Restaurant and Function facility located on the first floor of the building. This display will help educate the restaurant’s patrons about the benefits of renewable energy. According to Sal Lupoli, CEO of Sal’s Pizza, “We are so excited about demonstrating our sincere regard for the environment to the community and that solar energy is a viable alternative today”.

                    

Schuco and Sunlight Solar Partner on PV at Yale Dormitory

Schüco USA and Sunlight Solar have completed a 40 kW flat roof photovoltaic (PV) system installed on a dormitory building on the campus of Yale University in New Haven, Connecticut. The 40kW grid-tied system, installed atop Fisher Hall at the Yale Divinity School is comprised of 262 Schüco polycrystalline 158-SP PV modules each with a +5%/- 0% performance tolerance each producing 158 watts of peak power. The system was mounted with Schüco's SolarEZ mounting system which is suitable for photovoltaics and solar thermal systems installed on flat roofs as well as composite shingle,
S-tile, mission tile, and or standing seam metal pitched roofs. Schüco also provided design and wiring layout --services on this project.

The installation was handled by Sunlight Solar Energy, Inc. This project was made possible through the support of Connecticut's Clean Energy Fund.

                    

Connecticut's Largest Solar PV Installation at Whole Foods Markets' Distribution Center in Cheshire

The Connecticut Clean Energy Fund (CCEF), SunEdison and Whole Foods Market recently hosted a dedication ceremony to celebrate the unveiling of a 121-kilowatt solar photovoltaic (PV) system installed on the rooftop of the Whole Foods Market Distribution Center in Cheshire, Connecticut. Covering about 10% of the 150,000 square foot roof of the Whole Foods Market building, the installation is the largest in the State of Connecticut, generating approximately 137,500 kilowatt hours per year and supplying 10% of the facility's total energy needs. The installation at Whole Foods is five times the size of the next largest solar installation in Connecticut.

The Whole Foods Market project was launched through the combined effort of the Connecticut Clean Energy Fund, SunEdison which will own the equipment for at least ten years, and Whole Foods which will purchase "clean power" during that time period. The entire system comes at no additional capital costs to Whole Foods and will save them operating expenses on their energy bill immediately. This is SunEdison’s fourth facility deployment with Whole Foods.

                    

MA Technology Collaborative Expands
Large PV Project Support

In addition to committing $3.5 million to Round 3 of the Large On-Site Renewable Initiative (LORI), with $1 million set aside for PV projects, MTC has retroactively expanded the LORI funds available for applications received in Round 2 in August 2006. August’s applications far exceeded MTC’s original $2.0 million budget. In October, MTC’s Board authorized a new $4.0 million total budget for August applications (with the retroactive commitment of an additional $2.0 million). This will allow MTC to fund a larger number of the worthy applications it had received. The announcement of specific awards will be made in December after project contracts have been executed.

LORI Grant information

                    

SEBANE Welcomes New Members

EBM Consulting Services is an independent energy services firm with an emphasis on renewables and efficiency. Their services range from consulting to designing as well as installing large energy efficient and renewable projects. EBM is headed by Vicki Harkness and located in Millbrook, NY.

Environmental Solar Systems provides innovative energy efficient solar systems to industrial, business and residential customers. For 24 years, ESS has been developing and installing solar systems. They are located in Methuen, MA. Paul Soucy is president.

NexGen Energy Solutions is a renewable energy integration company serving commercial and residential clients in northeast Massachusetts and southern New Hampshire. Nexgen specializes in solar electric, hot water, and active air heating systems that work best in the New England climate. Dan Leary is president and the firm is located in North Andover, MA.

Solar Systems, Inc. services and repairs all types of existing solar thermal systems, and designs and installs new solar thermal systems. Dan Gorman is president. The company is based in Plymouth, MA.

                    

 

November 28 - Solar - the Path to Grid Parity presented by the TiE-Boston - Waltham, MA
Without subsidies solar has an unclear path to economic viability in the consumer and commercial markets. What are the influencers and obstacles? How far off is grid parity?

December 7 - An Update on Finance Market for Clean Technology is presented by the Boston Area Solar Energy Society - Cambridge, MA
The BASEA forum features venture capitalist Katrina Funk. A reception begins at 7 pm with the program beginning at 7:30 pm.

December 12 and January 31 - Residential Green Building Workshops sponsored by Building for Social Responsibility in collaboration with the Vermont Green Building Network, and Efficiency Vermont - December 12 Norwich, VT; and January 31 Manchester, VT.
The one-day advanced residential green building training is geared towards builders, remodelers, architects, interior designers, and other interested professionals.

                    

Solar Energy Business Association of New England
151 Merrimac StreetSuite 660Boston, Massachusetts 02114
phone: 617.227.6980 • www.SEBANE.org