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Promise of Clean Energy Program News
For Immediate Release:
2010-03-09
For More Information:
Contact Luke Metzger (512) 479-0388 New Report Outlines Bold New Vision For Solar In America
SAN
ANTONIO – From churches and baseball stadiums, to homes and cars, solar energy
is already enhancing energy security and reducing pollution in America. A new Environment Texas report outlines a vision for
using the sun to meet10 percent of the United States’ total energy needs by 2030. “The sun provides more energy in an hour than all the coal mines and oil
wells do in a year,” said McCall Johnson, the Clean Energy Advocate from
Environment Texas. “This solar energy is
limitless and pollution free. America
can and must figure out how to tap the heat and power of the sun. Solar power is also increasingly cost competitive with older, dirtier
sources of energy.” The Episcopal
Reconciliation Church in San Antonio began seriously considering solar energy about
two years ago, and their 14.8 kilowatt installation was completed about three
weeks ago. “We recognize our role in environmental stewardship and
realize that rising costs of energy produced by fossil fuels will
eventually threaten the Parish's budget,” said Carl Strating, of The Episcopal
Reconciliation Church. Building
a Solar Future: Repowering America’s Homes, Businesses and Industry with Solar
Energy examines a wide variety of solar technologies and
tools, including photovoltaics, concentrating solar power, solar water heaters,
solar space heating, and passive solar design. The report also profiles various applications of solar
energy currently in use, such as: The report finds that by achieving a 10
percent goal for solar energy, within two decades the sun could provide more
energy than the U.S. currently produces at nuclear power plants, more than half
as much as it currently consumes in American cars and light trucks, or nearly half
as much as we currently obtain from burning coal. Solar energy can play a major
role in weaning the nation from dangerous, polluting, unstable and, in many
cases, increasingly expensive forms of energy. Environment Texas called on local, state and federal governments to
remove the barriers currently impeding the spread of solar energy. This can be accomplished by investing in
solar and adopting strong policies to make solar energy an important part of
America’s energy future. Such policies include financial incentives, advanced
building codes, public education, workforce development, research and
development, and a strong renewable electricity standard requiring utilities to
get a percentage of their electricity from renewable energy, like solar. Environment
Texas encourages Governor Perry and the Public Utility Commission to implement
rules to encourage solar power, including distributed renewable generation this
spring, and applauds the efforts of CPS Energy to spur local solar development. “Americans today need barrels of oil from a
desert half a world away, in the most unsettled and dangerous region of the
earth, just to power a trip to the grocery store in San Antonio,”said Johnson, “How much easier and more secure would it be to harness the heat and
light that strikes our rooftops every day?” ### Environment Texas is a state-based, citizen-funded
environmental organization working for clean air, clean water, and open space.
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