Solar News: April 2018

Chinese Solar Highway

Scientists and engineers in China are developing the
blueprint for a high-tech road, complete with solar panels and charging
stations. This new “prototype” is designed for driverless cars, complete with
mapping sensors. Said features will lie below a transparent “concrete” road
spanning 1,080 meters. The solar panels will not only provide power for the
charging stations, but also nearly 800 surrounding homes in the eastern city of
Jinan. These solar roads are a small part of a much larger plan to become the
world’s artificial intelligence technology innovation center. By 2030, China
estimates that 10% of its vehicles will be driverless. Only the future can tell
whether this plan will pan out.

Repurposing Dump Sites into Solar Farms

The towns of Narragansett and South Kingstown and the
University of Rhode Island are building solar farms on old trash and
dumping sites, making use of otherwise useless space. Kearsarge Energy was the
winning bidder for the sites. This company will build the solar farms, keep 75%
of the power generated, and sell the remaining 25% to local towns and the
university. Both of the sites were previously found to have toxic chemicals,
but have since been remediated. Cheers to new beginnings!

Solar Becoming Bigger Investment than Fossil Fuels

2017 was a big year for solar. According to the Global
Trends in Renewable Energy Investment 2018 Report, released by the UN
Environment, Frankfurt School – UNEP Collaborating Centre, and Bloomberg New
Energy Finance, China was the leader in the solar investment, topping out at 1$26.6
billion, up 31% from 2016. There were also sharp increases in investment in
Australia, Mexico, and Sweden. In 2017, the world added more solar capacity
than coal, nuclear, and gas combined. These days, the amount of electricity
generated by renewables, including wind, biomass, solar, marine, hydro and
geothermal is 12%. We’re becoming greener!

New State Solar Bills

About a week ago, a new bill passed in South Carolina which
will make solar a better investment. The new bill will remove an artificial cap
on net metering from rooftop installations. The removal of the cap will
encourage more home and business owners choose solar as a cost effective and
long-term investment option. South Carolina saw an explosion in solar energy
installation in 2017. The state added 396 megawatts, quadrupling its total
amount of solar capacity. Renogy has several large solar projects in this
state. We say this new bill is a step in the right direction!


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