California OKs Rules to allow bundling, sale of power from consumers

In a first, the state’s grid operator has approved rules allowing companies to buy electricity from numerous homes and commercial power systems, and then bundle it up to meet a threshold needed to sell energy on the wholesale market.

Companies including utilities will be able to consolidate the output of rooftop solar systems, batteries and even plug-in electric vehicles, the California Independent System Operator Corp. said Thursday in a statement. The shift demonstrates that small-scale power sources are becoming a more critical part of the state’s energy mix.

Will solar add value to your home?  Contact the appraisers at www.scappraisals.com for your home value questions.

“This is an important win for California energy users,” said Ken Munson, chief executive officer of Sunverge Energy, which aggregates power from solar panels and batteries installed at homes and businesses. “It paves the way for consumers to play a more active role in the generation and distribution of the energy we use every day.”

Spurred by declining costs and leasing programs that offer installation with no upfront customer payments, residential solar has been the fastest-growing part of the California solar industry. It increased by 50 percent last year, outpacing utility-scale solar, which expanded 15 percent, according to Bloomberg New Energy Finance.

Some Californians are already helping juice the grid by participating in utility programs that pay them for power from their solar panels that they don’t use, a service known as net metering. Those won’t be able to bid in the wholesale markets.

The move by the grid operator “could ultimately benefit providers of distributed solar, because it creates the opportunity for an alternative source of revenue outside of net metering,” said Madeline Yozwiak, an analyst at Bloomberg New Energy Finance.

read more at: http://washpost.bloomberg.com/Story?docId=1376-NRLB1Y6KLVR801-13Q7F9BS26OPTD8P9V327GNT7H

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San Diego – Free Learning for Water Savings

Free Miramar mulch: Oh, mulch, magical mulch. With its amazing ability to retain water and slow evaporation when you spread it around your garden, this shredded bark-like substance is a drought must-have. And if you are a resident of the city of San Diego, you are eligible for two cubic yards of free mulch (or compost) courtesy of the Miramar Greenery, located in the Miramar Landfill. One cubic yard is enough to fill six 32-gallon trash cans. You will have to load it yourself, so bring your own tools, containers and a tarp. Call ahead to make sure the mulch is available. The Greenery also sells mulch, compost and wood chips. (Miramar Landfill, 5180 Convoy St., San Diego 92111; 858-492-6100.)

Homeowner’s WaterSmart Landscape Guide: How much water-saving advice can you find on the San Diego County Water Authority’s WaterSmart website? How much time do you have? From information on rebates to the interactive (and exhaustive) “E-Guide to a WaterSmart Lifestyle,” the site is a fountain of information. And whether you are contemplating a massive yard makeover or just want to replace a few water-guzzling plants with something a lot more miserly, the WaterSmart Landscape Guide is your online path to drought-tolerant enlightenment.

read more at: http://www.sandiegouniontribune.com/news/2015/jun/19/water-saving-tips-resources-san-diego/

Joan Rivers Penthouse sells for $28,000,000

joanThe palatial triplex on the Upper East Side that Joan Rivers called home for more than a quarter of a century until her death last year — where she had honed her caustic comedy routines, entertained celebrities, and, by her own telling, even encountered a belligerent ghost — sold for $28 million and was the most expensive closed sale of the week, according to city records.

 The property, a penthouse with an adjoining unit, No. 5A, which was occupied by her daughter, Melissa Rivers, and grandson, Edgar Cooper Endicott, is at 1 East 62nd Street, off Fifth Avenue. The buyer was “Middle Eastern royalty” who paid the full asking price, according to a spokeswoman for the listing broker, the Corcoran Group. The monthly carrying costs are $25,337.

 The 11-room apartment, with four bedrooms, four and a half baths and five wood-burning fireplaces, encompasses around 5,100 square feet on the top three floors of the seven-story 1903 limestone mansion, which was designed by Horace Trumbauer in neo-French Classic style. The triplex has two terraces totaling 430 square feet that offer Central Park and cityscape views.

read more at: http://www.nytimes.com/2015/07/19/realestate/penthouse-owned-by-joan-rivers-sold-for-28-million.html?_r=0