Global News features a homeowner who installed solar panels and is now seeing the benefits. He requested a meter that would feed the excess energy he doesn’t need back into the utility grid, but didn’t see it for months. The power company exec offers no explanation, only to say that the problem has been fixed. And the reporter stated that someone refused to be interviewed…I’m assuming it’s the power company’s representative?
Anyway, I thought about all the excuses used for not pushing solar energy for the northern states–that there’s just not enough sunlight to make it economically feasible—and here we have someone in Canada, which has even less sunlight and because of the shape of Earth, is less intense energy from the sun, and yet they are still able to absorb enough energy to power their homes and have more to send back to the utility company. Kind of blows that excuse, doesn’t it?
There are others here in the U.S. who go completely off-grid, where they’re not attached to the public utility, and they use batteries to store the excess energy for days that the sun doesn’t shine.
The time has come for solar. Cheap–when you factor in environmental damage by all other means of producing energy: coal (mercury, lead, arsenic), oil (cancer), nuclear (cancer), gas (fracking–mercury, cancer, and God only knows what else).—plus their detrimental effects on climate change.
Clean. Unlimited power source.
I did a web search and found a national geographic video on a solar farm–but the narrator states that unlike solar panels, they use mirrors that reflect light upward, and then a tube with synthetic oil captures the heat, to transport it. With that information, I clicked off the video. Why on Earth would they use synthetic oil?? It just seems that we are so creatively challenged that we can’t think outside the oil box.
It’s just so harrrrd to think sustainably!! /said with dripping sarcasm