Categories: "Solar Economics"

11/10/09

  03:47:54 pm, by Jim Jenal - Founder & CEO   , 347 words  
Categories: All About Solar Power, Solar Economics, SEIA

Solar Bill of Rights - Rights # 4, 5 & 6

The next Rights set forth in SEIA’s Solar Bill of Rights, concern those rights specific to the solar industry itself.  
In particular:

4. The solar industry has the right to a fair competitive environment.

5. The solar industry has the right to equal access to public lands.

6. The solar industry has the right to interconnect and build new transmission lines.

Let’s take these one at a time…

What does it mean for the solar industry to have a “fair competitive environment” in which to operate?  After all, isn’t solar already heavily subsidized through rebates and tax credits?  It is true that over the past few years, particularly in California, we have seen more favorable treatment for solar than in the past.  And yet, these subsidies are but a tiny fraction of the billions of dollars that the fossil fuel industries have received for decades.

According to Scientific American (citing a study by the Environmental Law Institute and the Woodrow Wilson International Center for Scholars), between 2002 and 2008, the fossil fuel industry received approximately $72 billion.  In contrast, all renewables received just $29 billion, but more than half of that - $16.8 billion - went to pay for ethanol from corn, a poor environmental choice.  Solar’s share?  Less than $1 billion.

A similar concern arises over access to public lands.  For years, fossil fuel producers have had nearly unfettered access to federal lands with the government getting a very poor return on its investment.  (For example, see this listing of Bush-era actions to open up public lands to the fossil fuel industry.)  For utility scale solar to succeed, access to public lands in an environmentally sensitive way is crucial.

Likewise, to get clean solar energy to the demand centers around the country that need it, the solar industry and others will need to construct, and interconnect into, new, smarter transmission systems.  These too will need access to public lands to make them affordable.

These rights will go a long way to leveling the playing field for the solar industry and hasten the day when a substantial percentage of the nation’s energy can be supplied by clean solar power systems.

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Jim Jenal is the Founder & CEO of Run on Sun, Pasadena's premier installer and integrator of top-of-the-line solar power installations.
Run on Sun also offers solar consulting services, working with consumers, utilities, and municipalities to help them make solar power affordable and reliable.

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