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- <text id=93TT0052>
- <title>
- Oct 18, 1993: Here Comes The Sun
- </title>
- <history>
- TIME--The Weekly Newsmagazine--1993
- Oct. 18, 1993 What in The World Are We Doing?
- </history>
- <article>
- <source>Time Magazine</source>
- <hdr>
- ENERGY, Page 84
- Here Comes The Sun
- </hdr>
- <body>
- <p>After a slow start, solar power seems poised to light up the
- world--and utilities are getting the message
- </p>
- <p>By JOHN GREENWALD--Reported by Jonathan Beaty/Ukiah
- </p>
- <p> Solar power was an exotic new technology when John Schaeffer
- graduated from the University of California, Berkeley, in 1972
- and helped start a primitive commune in the woods of northern
- California. But he was a tinkerer, and in his spare time he
- managed to rig up a solar-powered television set so he wouldn't
- have to miss his favorite shows. Soon Schaeffer was selling
- solar panels to his fellow urban refugees at a time when, he
- recalls, "only dope growers could afford them." Today Schaeffer's
- beard has become a white goatee, and his Real Goods Trading
- Co. has blossomed into a catalog operation that is the country's
- largest retailer of home solar equipment. The growth of Real
- Goods--sales have jumped from $29,000 in 1986 to $10 million
- this year--is a small but sharp tremor along the shifting
- tectonic plates of America's energy landscape.
- </p>
- <p> Until now, solar energy has appealed mostly to affluent homeowners
- and self-described tree huggers--the save-the-environment
- folks. That's because buying and installing solar equipment
- can cost $15,000 for an average-size home before any current
- starts to flow. "Even Edison first electrified the homes of
- his wealthy investors, so the high-end client has always been
- fertile ground," says Steven Strong, whose firm, Solar Design
- Associates, based in Harvard, Massachusetts, is among the country's
- leading designers of solar homes.
- </p>
- <p> To broaden the market, Strong set out to design an all-solar
- neighborhood of 30 working-class houses and eight commercial
- buildings in Gardner, Massachusetts, that opened in 1986. Sponsored
- by New England Electric Systems utility company, the project
- offers a glimpse of the day when solar-run homes could become
- as common as split-level houses. Solar power already helps heat
- and light more than 100,000 U.S. houses. And this week Real
- Goods is sponsoring a tour of homes from Maine to California
- that have all their energy needs met by sun, wind or water power.
- </p>
- <p> What's making solar energy so hot? For one thing, the technology
- is getting better and cheaper. The price of the photovoltaic
- cells that convert sunlight to electricity has fallen precipitously
- from $500 a watt in the 1960s to about $4 today. Companies are
- now rushing to break the $2 barrier, which would reduce the
- residential cost of solar electricity from 30 cents per kWh
- to near the 12 cents average price of electricity in California.
- Leading contestants in the scramble are Texas Instruments and
- Southern California Edison, which have joined forces to produce
- flexible solar panels from inexpensive low-grade silicon by
- 1994. The innovative technology will allow the panels to be
- integrated into car and building design and, even more important,
- will crash the price to $2.50 a watt.
- </p>
- <p> As the price of solar technology has plummeted, the political
- climate has improved. While Jimmy Carter created tax breaks
- to spur solar development, Ronald Reagan viewed the incentives
- as government meddling in the energy business and unceremoniously
- scrapped them. In a symbolic move, Reagan also took down the
- solar panels Carter had installed on the roof of the White House.
- (The Clinton Administration is considering whether to put up
- new ones.) "Reagan took the steam and momentum out of solar
- and other forms of renewable energy development for a good 10
- years," says Strong.
- </p>
- <p> Some of the biggest boosters of solar power are bound to be
- utility companies, eager for a clean source of electricity that
- will enable them to produce more power without new billion-dollar
- plants. Both as consumers of solar technology and as the promoters
- of home solar panels, utilities will drive much of the industry's
- growth into the next century. "Utilities are beginning to realize
- that they're going to have to get on the solar bandwagon," says
- S. David Freeman, general manager of the Sacramento Municipal
- Utility District (SMUD). "If they don't and rates go up sharply,
- people are going to buy their own solar panels and pull the
- plug on the utilities." His company embraced alternative energy
- when rate payers voted to close its troubled nuclear facility
- in 1989.
- </p>
- <p> Last month 68 utilities, from New York City's Consolidated Edison
- to San Francisco's Pacific Gas & Electric, formed a consortium
- to purchase $500 million worth of solar panels over the next
- six years. These utilities, which serve 40% of the country's
- electric customers, hope solar power can help replace aging
- plants that will begin phasing out by the end of the decade.
- Says Scott Sklar, director of the Solar Energy Industries Association,
- which represents more than 500 U.S. solar-equipment makers:
- "This will allow the solar industry to double its manufacturing
- capacity and acquire new capital to ramp up new production."
- That in turn will reduce manufacturing costs.
- </p>
- <p> No utility is more enthusiastic about letting the sun shine
- in than SMUD, which is putting solar cells on 100 residential
- roofs a year as part of a five-year pilot project. Homeowners
- pay nothing for the installation but see a 15% surcharge on
- their monthly bills to help defray the cost. Even so, the chance
- to become a solar citizen has enticed more volunteers than SMUD
- can accommodate. Encouraged by the response, the utility has
- ordered 100,000 more solar panels, enough to generate electricity
- for 2,400 homes, and is purchasing land for a 100-MW solar furnace
- that would rival the size of standard power plants.
- </p>
- <p> What SMUD is doing parallels what developing countries have
- been up to for more than a decade. These nations, which cannot
- afford to build costly nuclear or fossil-fuel plants in rural
- areas, now buy nearly two-thirds of all solar panels produced
- in the U.S. "In Mexico there are 28 million people without electricity,
- and Mexico has the most ambitious solar electrification program
- in the world," says Sklar. Elsewhere, India and Zimbabwe are
- using World Bank financing to light up remote areas with solar
- power; India is installing photovoltaic systems in 38,000 villages,
- and Zimbabwe is bringing sun power to 2,500 villages.
- </p>
- <p> In the U.S., where there is little government help, the Real
- Goods catalog has become the bible of America's environmentally
- aware set. With a circulation of 400,000, the catalog offers
- everything for the energy-efficient home, including composting
- toilets, solar radios and wind generators in addition to solar
- equipment. Hot-selling items include fold-up solar panels the
- size of a briefcase that can power laptop computers. Technicians
- at Real Goods headquarters in Ukiah, California, stand ready
- to handle customers' questions and help plan alternative energy
- systems over the phone.
- </p>
- <p> But the era of solar power will have to wait for the cost of
- converting sunlight to fall far enough to pay for the cost of
- installing a system. "Solar is competitive now if you take the
- long view," says SMUD general manager Freeman. "And it's going
- to be highly competitive by the end of the decade." If he's
- right, the forecast for the industry in the 21st century is
- bright and sunny.
- </p>
-
- </body>
- </article>
- </text>
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