Farmers grow electricity along with their crops

Besides the 40-some dwarf Nigerian goats they milk to make artisanal cheeses, they also raise chickens for meat and eggs, a steer for beef, horses to ride and vegetables for the table.

Unlike most small farms, their heat and electricity is entirely home grown. They produce electricity from solar panels when the sun shines, and a micro-hydro turbine when winter rains put water in the creek. Oak and fir cut from the farm fire a boiler that heats the cement floors of the dairy and cheese making room, as well as the hot water to wash the goats and themselves.

“We thought we should be responsible for our own energy,” said Vern Caldwell, a retired U.S. Marine Corps aircraft maintenance officer. “So that drove a lot of everything else that we did — where the buildings were placed, how they were placed, taking advantage of passive solar, how we were going to heat, how we were going to cool. All those issues then got driven by this one decision to be off the grid.”

Pholia Farm is unusual in the degree to which it is energy self-sufficient.

But more farms are installing renewable energy, said Stephanie Page, renewable energy specialist for the Oregon Department of Agriculture. The motivation was sparked by the 2008 spike in fuel prices, and is being fanned by a range of grants and tax credits handed out by state, federal and private agencies.

“As they exhaust energy efficiency projects on their farms, then they are starting to look more at renewable energy,” she said.

Just how many remains unclear, but the motivation seems to still be a desire to be green more than the bottom line, despite an increasing array of financial incentives.

No one really knows how many U.S. farms use renewable energy, such as solar photovoltaic panels, hydroelectric generators, and methane digesters. The 2007 Farm Census found 23,451 out of more than 2 million farms — about 1 percent — generated some kind of electricity or energy, but just what that means is unclear. The agency is doing a more detailed count this year.

But indications are that the numbers are rising.

Overall renewable energy production rose 5 percent from 2007 to 2008, according to the Energy Information Administration.

And there were $9 million worth of applications for just $2.4 million in grants authorized by the 2008 Farm Bill for farm energy audits, a precondition to applying for alternative energy grants, said Bill Hagy, special assistant for alternative energy policy for the secretary of Agriculture.

Read the full article from The Associated Press

See and download the full gallery on posterous

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Leaked Lotus doc hints at e-Evora

Leaked Lotus doc hints at e-Evora

Another Lotus-made electric speedster, anyone?

Leccy Tech The evidence that Lotus may launch a leccy version of its Evora sports car is mounting, following a leaked company presentation highlighting how the model could be used as the basis for a sporty e-car.

Lotus Evora

Lotus’ Evora: is a leccy model be in the works?

Lotus’ engineering document outlines the Evora’s suitability as an electric vehicle (EV), revealing how an Evora EV could be powered by a 200kW (269bhp) electric motor connected to a 71kWh battery.

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Dude! Dell Goes Green with Solar Grove

Perhaps money really does grow on trees after all! Solar Trees are sprouting up in the parking lot of Dell Inc. (NASDAQ: DELL) corporate headquarters located in Round Rock, Texas.

It is estimated Dell’s “Solar Grove” project will provide 131,000 kW/h of clean solar power to the building, avoiding greenhouse gas emissions by about 145,000 pounds per year. But wait, there’s more. More than 500 individual solar panels will provide shade to some 50-plus parking spaces in the employee parking lot. Plus, the trees include two Coulomb ChargPoints for electric vehicles and plug-in hybrids.

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Spanish Solar Company SOLARIG Building 8 PV Parks in Italy : CleanTechnica

Spanish Solar Company SOLARIG Building 8 PV Parks in Italy

SOLARIG, a company based in Spain that incorporated about four years ago, just began construction of eight photovoltaic parks in Italy this month. The parks will provide 8 MW of energy in total. Over the next few months, it plans to construct photovoltaic projects producing 30 MW throughout different regions of Italy.

But this is just the beginning. SOLARIG has a more global vision.

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2nd Annual U.S.-China Green Tech Summit Catalyst for Project-to-Project Partnerships to Reduce C02 | Reuters

2nd Annual U.S.-China Green Tech Summit Catalyst for Project-to-Project Partnerships to Reduce C02

BP Solar, Suntech, McKinsey among Speakers at November 16-17, 2009 Event in Beijing, China

SAN FRANCISCO–(Business Wire)–

At the US-China Green Tech Summit, leading green technology CEOs, venture capitalists and academics will engage in dialogue on how U.S.-China project-to-project partnerships can reduce CO2, generate green jobs and ensure energy independence.

Speakers and participants will tackle key issues, form lasting partnerships and promote U.S.-China collaboration on green tech development, investment and implementation.

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New law makes solar panel leasing possible

Solar panels on your roof? New law makes leasing possible

Parking garages typically serve one obvious function.

But drive to the top of the parking garage on First and Sierra Streets in downtown Reno, and you’ll realize that this is one facility that also can take the heat.

Solar panels have turned the garage from a one-trick pony to a building that harnesses renewable energy. And thanks to a new Nevada law, proponents of green energy are predicting that similar projects will become more common across the Silver State.

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Renewable Funding let’s you easily finance your solar panel investment | VentureBeat

renewable funding

Renewable Funding, a company that makes it easier for homeowners to finance solar or other renewable funding projects with friendly terms, has raised $12.2 million in a first round of funding.

The Oakland, Calif., based company’s model is noteworthy because it lets you attach your financing to your property tax bill.

So if you sell your house after investing in an expensive solar paneled roof, the financing stays on your home’s property tax bill, even if you sell the house.

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Green Cities Concept on the Behance Network

Incredibly cool Green Cities Concept from Behance

Posted via web from New Orleans Solar Power

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All-electric Three-wheeler For Busy Streets – Ecofriend

This is a cool concept – it looks like a cross between a trike and a Segway. Perfect for urban environments with friendly drivers. Might find yourself out of luck in NYC.

Posted via web from New Orleans Solar Power

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New Orleans Solar Powered School – Warren Easton High

Warren Easton High – New Orleans Solar

New Orleans Schools Go Solar With Entergy, Nike, Winrock International, U.S. Green Building Council Partnership, City of New Orleans

New Orleans Schools Go Solar With Entergy, Nike, Winrock International, U.S.  Green Building Council Partnership, City of New Orleans    NEW ORLEANS, Sept. 30 /PRNewswire-FirstCall/ -- Work on an advanced,  hurricane-resistant solar roof wrapped up this week at Warren Easton Senior  High School, the first project of a partnership between Entergy Corporation,  Nike Corporation, Winrock International, the Louisiana Chapter of the U.S.  Green Building Council and the city of New Orleans.      The New Orleans public school is now equipped with a 28-kilowatt solar array  that will produce approximately 37,000 kilowatt-hours of electricity annually  - enough to power three typical residential homes.       The partners committed almost $1.7 million to the project with $1.5 million  coming from Entergy Corp. The installation at Warren Easton, which becomes the  largest solar array in the city, cost approximately $500,000, including  equipment, materials and installation.   

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