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Power Technology

California Has Become the First State To Get Over 5% of Its Power From Solar 265

Lucas123 writes: While the rest of the nation's solar power generation hovers around 1%, California clocked in with a record 5% of power coming from utility-grade (1MW or more) solar power sources, according to a report from Mercom Capital Group and the Energy Information Administration. That's three times the next closest state, Arizona. At the same time, 22 states have yet to deploy even one utility-grade solar power plant, according to the Solar Energy Industry Association. Meanwhile, the rest of the world saw a 14% uptick in solar power installations in 2014 for a total of 54.5GW of capacity, and that figure is expected to grow even faster in 2015. While China still leads the world in new solar capacity, Japan and the U.S. come in as a close second and third, respectively. In the U.S. distributed solar and utility-grade solar installations are soaring as the solar investment tax credit (ITC) is set to expire next year. The U.S. is expected to deploy 8.5GW of new solar capacity in 2015, according to Mercom Capital Group.
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California Has Become the First State To Get Over 5% of Its Power From Solar

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  • so 1% by all the Californians, 1% Google, 1% Apple, 1% Tesla and 1% who ?

    • Re: (Score:2, Funny)

      by Thanshin ( 1188877 )

      so 1% by all the Californians, 1% Google, 1% Apple, 1% Tesla and 1% who ?

      Taking into account that their HQ is in Geneva, I don't think any of California's solar power comes from the world health organization.

  • by cloud.pt ( 3412475 ) on Wednesday April 01, 2015 @06:14AM (#49384909)
    Here in Portugal, my electric bill states we do at least 30% from wind sources, and overall +70% is renewable. We rarely get outages, and we have a very decent supply of fossil-fuel from North Africa. We have a lot less surface area than California (~100.000 vs 400.000 km) , and probably less sunlight time overall, considering cloudy days are like 30% of the year span. Let me know when a state gets even close to that!
  • by tomhath ( 637240 ) on Wednesday April 01, 2015 @06:56AM (#49385091)
    FTA:

    The pace of PV installations in the U.S. is accelerating as the federal government's solar investment tax credit (ITC) is set to expire next year.

    We've been through this before. All of the graphs on this page assume last year's growth will continue unabated. But what we're really seeing is a rush to grab as much of the subsidy as possible before the free money goes away.

    • NJ (#2 in solar in the US) has a subsidy scheme with "Solar Renewable Energy Credits". Many local governments bet on that subsidy to pay off solar panel installs with these SRECs, only for the market to crash (a victim of its own success) : http://www.nj.com/morris/index... [nj.com]

      Note the collapse in prices: http://www.srectrade.com/srec_... [srectrade.com]
    • Good. Once it's gone, maybe we'll all be rich enough to buy solar panels.

      A solar panel tax break just raises the damand by, say, $500 of government incentive, plus persuasive incentive margin. That is to say: a $1500 installation that gets a consumer-reaching $500 rebate becomes a $2000 installation, in theory; in reality, the consumer sees a chance to obtain a discount on a $2000 installation, and manufacturers can profit more by raising that installation cost to $2100 because fewer than 20% of custom

  • by pscottdv ( 676889 ) on Wednesday April 01, 2015 @07:24AM (#49385259)

    Iowa was getting nearly 30% of their power from wind energy two years ago, already.

  • by quietwalker ( 969769 ) <pdughi@gmail.com> on Wednesday April 01, 2015 @07:41AM (#49385349)

    Did you know that Texas, home of Big Oil, produces slightly more than 10% of it's power from wind, about 14,098 MW according to wikipedia. They're the nation's leader in wind energy. Florida does solar better than anyone else, and for overall green energy, Washington (via dams, mostly).

    In a related tangent, California claims to get almost 5% of their power from wind, though they only produce 5,917 MW from theirs, and have about 10 million more people, so somewhere, something doesn't add up.

    My guess is that a lot of these "% power" claims, including the one in the article, come down more to clever accounting than actual, literal green draw.

    • by dave420 ( 699308 ) on Wednesday April 01, 2015 @09:37AM (#49386137)
      Californians, on average, use about 50% of the energy Texans do, according to the 2012 figures.
      • Indeed, California is 49th in per capita energy use [eia.gov], no doubt due in large part to having the largest population in the nation.

        • Re: (Score:2, Insightful)

          by Anonymous Coward

          No doubt due to the fact that in much of CA (the densely populated areas next to the coast) you can survive without an AC or any type of heating. I don't have an AC and have gone numerous winters without turning on the heat. Heating and cooling is 30% of all energy consumption.

          • No doubt due to the fact that in much of CA (the densely populated areas next to the coast) you can survive without an AC or any type of heating.

            With a little more insulation than usual, you can do that pretty much anywhere in the USA. Oddly, California has higher standards for insulation than pretty much anywhere in the USA. We would very much like the rest of you to catch up sometime.

            • With a little more insulation than usual, you can do that pretty much anywhere in the USA.

              No, you really can't... you think so, but that doesn't make it true.

              When it is 10 degrees outside, you must have heat. Insulation reduces the rate of heat loss, it doesn't remove it.

              Our heat is provided by natural gas anyway, so not counted in electricity consumption. AC is where that really comes into play.

              When it is 100 degrees out for a whole month and it remains 90 degrees even past midnight, you simply must have AC.

              Now it is true that better insulation would reduce the overall need, since it would r

    • No mystery here. People in California use significantly less power than people in Texas. Probably something to do with year-round air conditioning.
    • by spauldo ( 118058 ) on Wednesday April 01, 2015 @11:02AM (#49386775)

      Ever been to Texas?

      It's pretty flat. It's really flat in the panhandle (you can see the curvature of the earth, I swear). There's a decent amount of wind available.

      Wind makes a lot of sense there. Drive along I20 west of Ft. Worth and you'll see huge stretches of wind turbines.

      Thing about Texas - there's a lot of it. Most of the population is in the large cities. The state is largely conservative, so they don't worry so much about environmental regulations or trying to make the world a better place or anything. That means you can put down power plants pretty much anywhere, and hardly anyone will care. Texas doesn't need to import energy. The only reason the wind turbines are there is because they're profitable.

      Ever been to California?

      California's not exactly the greatest place for wind. Sure, there are flat areas that do get a lot of wind, but that's mostly in the south - which is desert, aka prime solar country. North Cali is is covered in mountains and trees. Not exactly good land for wind turbines.

      California is largely progressive, which means they care about the environment and try to make the world a better place - through red tape. That means building power plants in California is a painful, expensive process. It also means they try to push energy efficiency as much as possible, so Californians actually use less electricity than, say, Texans.

      California imports a lot of their electricity.

      Now, add in the part of the article you apparently missed - ironically, the first line:

      California has become the first state with more than 5% of its annual utility-scale electricity generation from utility-scale solar power, according to EIA's Electric Power Monthly.

      The key words here are “more than 5% of its annual utility-scale electricity generation.” Considering they import a good chunk of their power, and use less electricity per person than the average Texan, it makes a lot more sense.

      Only marginally related: you know why we get so much wind here in Oklahoma? Because Kansas sucks and Texas blows.

  • Or just stay away altogether because more than 15 years of evidence points to a lack of story writing talent making April Fool's Day less than fun on /.

  • We are not born yesterday and it is getting to be irritating, these April fools jokes.
  • No wait, seriously?

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