Tag Archive for 'DOE'

Standard Solar on Extreme Makeover

Good Morning SuperForest!

We just got an email from our friends at Standard Solar. We met the Standard Solar crew last year, in Washington D.C. for the congratulatory rally for the D.O.E.

As it turns out, Standard Solar has been tapped to install a solar array on some lucky ducks house in the Sunday PM showing of Extreme Makeover.

Here’s a great little photo gallery of some of the projects that Standard Solar has carried out recently:


Find more photos like this on PickensPlan

And a fun little film:

Nice!

Here’s their press release:

Extreme Makeover: Home Edition This Sunday
Tune into your ABC affiliate this Sunday night, January 18, at 8pm EST and you should see one of the first-ever green dimensions of a home built by Ty Pennington and his crew on Extreme Makeover: Home Edition. On extremely short notice back in November, Extreme Makeover selected Standard Solar to design and install a pole-mounted, 2.76 kilowatt array of solar panels for the rebuilt Drumm family home in Quincy Township, Pennsylvania. As with other Extreme Makeovers, the story Ty tells and the home they build will hit home and warm the heart.”

So, if you’ve got a TV and are in the mood for some uplifting content, check out Standard Solar on Extreme Home Makeover this Sunday.

Congratulations both the Standard Solar for the recognition of their skills, and to Extreme Home Makeover for helping a lucky family get off of the grid.

(Anyone in the NY area have a TV? Can I come over and watch? I’ll bring potstickers.)

Love to All,

Jackson

(top picky via inhabitat)

Annie Carmichael for President!

Good Morning Lovelies!

Man, crazy news all around us! It can be a bit overwhelming, no?
When I get overwhelmed, I like to think about the people I know who are out there, using their hearts and minds to convince others to use their hearts and minds. Allow me to introduce you to just such a person.

Annie Carmichael.

(You may remember her from the post about the Peace party that Vote Solar threw for the D.O.E. to celebrate the installation of their new solar array, but if you don’t, let me re-introduce.)

Annie and I have known one another for many years. We went to high school together, were in the same French class (no jokes,) we ran together on the cross country team, her brother is my best friend. We were tight is what I’m saying.

So when she called me and asked if I’d like to voyage down to D.C. and cover the Vote Solar party, I said: “of course.”

“Good ol’ Annie,” thought I. I had no idea how good.

This amazing woman is working hard for a cleaner future for us all.
Annie works for the group Vote Solar as their Federal Policy Director. Vote Solar is a group that: “engages with state and local governments to build sustainable solar markets, removing regulatory barriers and laying the necessary groundwork for a solar future.”

Annie recently was kind enough sit for a brief interview:

SF: Who are you?

AC: My name is Annie Carmichael. I am a clean energy advocate.

SF: What are you working on?

AC: Right now my first priority is extending the expiring federal clean energy tax incentives. This package, which includes solar tax credits that makes it 30% cheaper for home owners and businesses owners to go solar, is set to expire on December 31, 2008. Sadly enough, these incentives essentially represent the entirety of our federal renewable energy policy platform. We cannot afford to let them expire, not when
our drive towards a renewable energy economy is already way too sloooowwww.

(The incentive package recently passed. It was attached to the massive bailout plan. Sweet.)

SF: How long have you been working there?

AC: I joined Vote Solar at the beginning of the 2008.

SF: What were you doing before?

AC: After college at UC Santa Cruz I moved out to Washington D.C. to organize for progressive federal energy policies. I spent three years there working on energy efficiency and renewable energy legislation. Then I took two years off to travel in Argentina and go to Graduate school at Oxford in the U.K.

SF: What are your short term goals for Vote Solar? What are your long
term goals?

AC: My short term goal is definitely a long-term extension of the solar tax credit. We need to send a clear signal to renewable energy companies and American citizens that our government is committed to clean energy production. Right now our renewable energy markets are growing rapidly, but they are still emerging markets, that need government support.

Our tax payer dollars subsidize the oil and gas industry to the tune of $18 billion every year, so unless we are going to do away with all those subsidies, I say we need to give renewables the same leg up.

Long-term I want to see the U.S. go 100% renewable, and dramatically improve our efficiency levels in all sectors of the economy.

SF: How is your office situation? How do things work over at VS?

AC: I just have to say I love the way Vote Solar operates. Our Executive Director, Adam Browning, really fosters a collaborative, supportive environment. There are six of us working on state policy and while we each have a distinct portfolio of states, we help each other out all the time.

SF: What excites you?

AC: The ocean. Hip-hop music. Yosemite.

SF: What inspires you?

AC: Nature.

SF: Who inspires you?

AC: My brother, my whole family really. My colleagues. Michelle Obama. Hillary Clinton. John Muir.

SF: How do you deal with rejection and hard times?

AC: Perhaps I have an unusual time-reference, but I often remember that in billions of years the sun will become a red giant and engulf the earth. Such a reminder puts everything in perspective you know? Nothing is REALLY worth getting angry about.

SF: What is the most important thing for people to know about your work?

AC: I want people to know that when people respond to our calls to action, when they contact their elected leaders, those phone calls and email really do make a difference. I want people to have faith in our democracy and actively engage.

SF: If a child asked you what they should do when they grow up, how
would you answer?

AC: I would say, “don’t think about that yet…go outside and play. Go get dirty and tired and then sleep well.

(Nice answer!)

SF: Where do you get your news?

AC: I listen to NPR, and the NY Times every morning. I check in at CNN.com during the day and whatever links my friends have on their google chat IDs. I often watch the Daily Show and PBS News Hour.

SF: Do you have a TV?

AC: Yes. For the first time in a decade.

SF: What do you do for exercise?

AC: I run, climb, surf, and walk a lot.

When we were just in D.C. the group that Annie had assembled had walked down to the D.O.E. building, carrying signs, smiling, waving. Understandably, building security at the D.O.E. got a bit edgy at seeing this group form out of nowhere. Men in suits appeared, speaking into their wrist watches. German Shepherds and their handlers popped out and began pacing around. Things got a tad tense.

Annie said: “Well, let’s go say hello.”
She and I then walked over to the biggest, broadest, most intimidating man I’ve ever seen. I was terrified. Kept my hands in plain sight, no sudden moves, that sort of thing.

The fearless Annie Carmichael walked right up to him, held out her hand and introduced herself. She sweetly explained who she was, who she worked for, and what we were all there to do.

The giant man said: “You’re not here to protest?”

Annie: “No sir, we’re just here to encourage and support.”

GM: “Not to protest?”

Annie: “Nope.”

At this, the giant man looked a trifle confused. He looked at us, then over at the smiling group of solar installation technicians peacefully showing their signs to passersby, back at us. Then he smiled.

From that moment on, things were different. The men with the German shepherds began playing with their dogs, everyone relaxed, and before we walked away, Annie had convinced the Nice Giant to let our group come and assemble underneath the D.O.E. building, as it was threatening to rain.

Annie did that. With all the fearlessness of someone who understands the law and isn’t afraid to exercise her constitutional right to get together with her fellow citizens and say: “Good job, D.O.E. Nicely done. Don’t forget to pass the incentive package to support further solar research and growth.”

We got there and things were scary, and with some beautifully applied energy, Annie made it all right. Made it cool for us to be there, and more than that, made the good people whose job it is to protect the building feel safe and relaxed, knowing that our presence there was beneficial.

I was so impressed.

When I get down, and things seem chaotic, (Which they are, and always will be. No worries.) I think about Annie and people like her. People who understand the way the game is played and how to use their skills for the benefit of us all. Annie Carmichael and her freedom-loving kind are the reason that I can sleep at night.

Because knowing that there are smart, driven, talented people in this world who are firmly for justice, equal rights, Peace, and sustainability is sometimes all I need.

There are lots of Annies on this magical planet.
SuperForest will try to introduce them to you.

A huge thank you and congratulations to Annie Carmichael and Vote Solar, who worked so hard to get the Solar incentive package passed, and who continue to blaze the trail toward a sustainable future for all Americans.

Go Annie! You maverick, you!

Love,

Jackson and Team SuperForest

The DOE’s New Solar Array!




Here are the pictures of the solar array the DOE put on roof of their DC headquarters.

“SunPower Corporation (Nasdaq: SPWR), a Silicon Valley-based manufacturer of high-efficiency, solar cells, solar panels, and solar systems, today announced that the U.S. Department of Energy (DOE) has installed a 205-kilowatt SunPower solar-electric system atop the roof of the Forrestal Building in Washington, D.C. U.S. Department of Energy Secretary Samuel W. Bodman dedicated the system at a ceremony being held at the facility today.

“The significance of this solar array is both practical and symbolic — it improves the way the Department consumes energy and it is a symbol of America’s commitment to using the best available new technologies to confront the energy challenges we face today and will face tomorrow,” said U.S. Secretary of Energy Samuel W. Bodman.”

“We are proud that the Department of Energy, which is investing research and development funding into a wide spectrum of solar technologies, chose SunPower’s high-efficiency solar panels to help power its headquarters,” said Tom Werner, chief executive officer of SunPower. “This installation is a testament to the growing adoption of solar energy on commercial and public buildings. Solar power systems help to minimize a customer’s exposure to electric rate volatility for decades into the future.”

SunPower PowerGuard(R) was chosen for the DOE’s rooftop because it integrated well into the existing roofline. PowerGuard is a patented, non-penetrating lightweight photovoltaic roofing system that delivers clean solar electricity to the building while protecting the roof from damaging effects of weather and UV radiation, as well as insulating the building to reduce heating and cooling costs. SunPower’s high-efficiency 230 solar panels were used in the DOE’s solar system and will generate approximately 222,000 kilowatt hours of electricity annually”

Nicely done SunPower Systems!

Vote Solar Party for Peace!

Good Morning All!

Jackson here.
Last week I was lucky enough to go down to Washington DC to cover a Peace party that Vote Solar threw.

Vote Solar is an incredible organization whose mission is to get better and more comprehensive solar-supporting legislation on the books.

All those delicious tax incentives for putting solar panels on your roof? Vote Solar played a big part of getting those incentives in place.

Last week the Department of Energy did something wonderful (and little publicized.) They put a big honking solar array on their roof to minimize their grid use!

Sweet.

Vote Solar organized a group of people, journalists, solar company owners, solar contractors, empathisers, to meet up in DC and (get this) congratulate the DOE on a job well done.

No chanting, no anger, no outrage. We were only there to support.

It was wonderful! Smiles everywhere. People meeting, exchanging information, putting faces to names. The main point of the gathering was to attract a bit of the run-off press from the rooftop press conference, but what ended up happening was more interesting.

What happened was a real group was formed. A group of like-minded, positive, enthusiastic people, all of whom are passionate about free energy from the sun.

In my humble opinion, the creation of this group was the big win that day. Now all of these contractors have fellow contractors they can call on in times of need. The journalists all met fellow sustainability-loving newsfolk who they can infotrade with.

It was a wonderful thing to be a part of. I shot some video as well, but I’m going to save it for a later post.

In the meantime, check out the photo set above.

Check out Vote Solar, they do wonderful non-partisan work.

Free, clean, sustainable energy from Big Yellow. Who doesn’t like that?

A huge congratulations to Vote Solar for cleverly harnessing the power of positivity, and to the U.S. Department of Energy for their foresight and smart use of the sun.

Love to All,

Jackson