By SolarByTheWatt.com on March 24, 2009
Developing residential solar power is critical to combating the energy crisis we are facing today. The rate we are consuming natural resources, especially non-renewable fossil fuels, is growing at an increasing rate. One example is the rapidly increasing number of automobiles in countries like China and India that didn’t used to have near as many [...]
By SolarByTheWatt.com on March 20, 2009
Similarly to the analysis we have done for solar we are putting the number together for the capacity needed of to replace coal, oil and natural gas with wind as sources for electricity.
We want to jump here directly to a graph comparing the different levels of electricity capacity currently generated from oil, coal, natural gas and the rest (nuclear, hydro etc) with the capacity wind power fields, farms need, the cost of investment needed and the land area used.
By SolarByTheWatt.com on March 9, 2009
Solar power alongside the applauding it gets it is also being criticized by the opponents of it especially in terms of the different measures of efficiency – physical, economic (investment) and land area use efficiency. Land area use efficiency is the topic of this study. Let’s look at the definito0ns for the other measures of efficiency just to put our essay in proper context.
By SolarByTheWatt.com on February 27, 2009
SolarByTheWatt.com is opening this discussion about solar panel certificates for standards conformity and quality and safety rating.
Please use the comments form on this story to let us know what you know …
By SolarByTheWatt.com on February 26, 2009
Are you thinking of installing solar power for homes? If so then here’s an inventory of all the parts you’ll need so as you can get a sense of the scale and general cost of the job.
Begin by establishing exactly how much of your home’s total energy usage you want to be run on solar power. Do you want solar power merely to heat the water and the water-heating system? Do you want to go completely off-grid and power the whole house by solar power? Either way, you’ll need to know how much energy your home is consuming per month on average.
By SolarByTheWatt.com on February 25, 2009
The rise in CO2 levels and global warming has raised the alarm in the need to look for alternative energy sources that don’t leave an environment impact. Even if government policies don’t support moving the country into a more environmentally friendly policies, we can take action on our own and do what we can to reduce our own environmental impact and reduce our dependence on fossil fuels.