Tag Archives: solar

San Diego’s Solar Report Card

San Diego leads state in solar power generation.

City limits had 4,500 grid-connected installations as of August, analysis reports.

San Diego generates more power from grid-connected solar panels on residential, commercial and government buildings than any other city in California, according to an analysis released Tuesday by the Environment California Research & Policy Center.

The study heralds San Diego’s role as a leader in the deployment of rooftop and similar on-site solar installations. There were more than 4,500 solar installations within city limits as of August 2011, ahead of runners-up Los Angeles and San Jose, the analysis found.

“San Diego has been an early and consistent leader in terms of embracing robust solar policies,” said Michelle Kinman, co-author of the study.

The report focuses on solar photovoltaic systems mostly owned by ratepayers or third-party financing companies, as opposed to electric utilities. Data were provided by state regulators, the state’s private and public utilities and the California Center for Sustainable Energy, which administers state solar initiatives in the San Diego area.

Read more at: http://www.utsandiego.com/news/2012/jan/25/tp-sd-leads-state-in-solar-power-generation/

Disclaimer: for information and entertainment purposes only

SDG&E Request to Change Rules on How it Pays Homes – Con Opinion

This is not an opinion of the Green Real Estate Appraiser Blog.  This is an article from the San Diego Union Tribune Newspaper.

“Just figure out what’s next,” visionary CEO of Apple, the late Steve Jobs, told an interviewer when asked about his success.

Jobs’s computer industry was infinitely more competitive than the static world of regulated utility companies. Jobs wasn’t running a monopoly with captive customers whose daily lives would collapse without his products. He didn’t have guaranteed profits predetermined by regulators. He couldn’t run to the public for rate increases.

Jobs did, however, have an unyielding compulsion to move forward, not backward. SDG&E’s controversial proposal to slap solar customers with a “network use charge” doesn’t just turn back the clock on responsible energy policy. It is a wholesale attempt to wipe out rooftop solar in order to protect an antiquated way of doing business by a company that, unlike Jobs, failed to evolve.

SDG&E argues that solar customers, who typically contribute power into the region’s grid during the day and draw from the grid at night, aren’t paying their fair share of upkeep costs. With public interest in solar soaring – prior to SDG&E’s proposal, county government was on pace to issue 1,336 solar permits by June 2012, a 36 percent increase over the prior year – the utility argues that non-solar customers are somehow “subsidizing” their neighbors.

SDG&E’s claims ring fantastically hollow when you count up the regional benefits of rooftop solar and weigh them against the devastating consequences of SDG&E’s network use charge.

Read entire article: http://www.signonsandiego.com/news/2011/dec/04/sdges-hollow-claims-hide-utilitys-real-motive/

Disclaimer: For information and entertainment purposes only

SDG&E’s Proposed Rate Restructuring Would Cost Solar Power Homeowners

Owners of rooftop solar installations are bracing for substantially higher monthly electricity bills under a proposal by San Diego’s utility monopoly to overhaul the way it charges customers of all kinds.

San Diego Gas & Electric asked regulators this month for permission to bill customers separately for use of its distribution grid.

Read more at: http://www.signonsandiego.com/news/2011/oct/28/solar-users-feel-burned/

Disclaimer: For Information and Entertainment Purposes Only.