Latest from Mag
People - Dec 21, 2012
Obituaries - Dec 21, 2012
November EPI Index Shows No Change
Housing Starts Dip 4% in November
Electrical Marketing - December 21, 2012
Around the Industry - Dec 21, 2012
A plan proposed by Southern California Edison (SCE), Rosemead, Calif., for the largest U.S. installation of advanced solar panels on otherwise unused large commercial rooftops across Southern California was approved June 19 by the California Public Utilities Commission.
During the next five years, SCE will install, own and operate 250 megawatts of solar generating capacity. The utility also will conduct competitive solicitations offering long-term power contracts to independent solar power providers that will install an additional 250 megawatts, bringing to 500 megawatts the total generating capacity of the project — the largest photovoltaic program ever undertaken.
“This innovative solar rooftop project is part of Edison International’s 25-year commitment to developing cleaner renewable and alternative energy sources for our customers,” said Theodore Craver, Jr., Edison International’s chairman and CEO. “The program will create hundreds of neighborhood solar power plants, strengthen local grid reliability and produce hundreds of new green jobs to bolster Southern California’s economic recovery.”
During the fall of 2008, SCE completed the first of what eventually will be about 150 sites making up this program, a 600,000-square-foot Fontana, Calif., distribution warehouse roof. The rooftop now holds 33,700 advanced thin-film solar panels with a generating capacity of 2.4 megawatts of direct current (DC) power — the largest single rooftop solar photovoltaic array in the nation.
SCE already has begun construction of its second installation atop a 458,000-square-foot industrial building in Chino, Calif. First Solar of Tempe, Ariz., was the winning bidder to supply panels for these first two installations.