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The array just feeds the eyeglass company. Of course we would all love to see charging stations tapping into that power.

This was the prototype. As you can see by the site it's great for spanning over things. The aqueduct idea is brilliant saving massive water evaporation and reusing land and generating power for moving water. Pumping water is the single largest use of power in CA.

For the ribbon cutting there were two Teslas and a MiniE to show concept.

edit to add:

At this point there are only two charging station at the Dell site.
http://www.jetsongreen.com/2009/10/dell-envision-solar-grove-round-rock.html
 
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San Jose, Calif.-based Chromasun, unveiled its first collector at the Solar Power International conference in Anaheim, Calif., this week.

Drove down to the Solar show last night. Open to the public 5:30 to 8:30 We arrived at 7 and the whole place was torn apart. Bummer, it looked amazing.

Open To the Public Night Wednesday, October 28 | 5:30 PM - 8:30 PM | Anaheim Convention Center Solar Power International is proud to announce it's Open To The Public Night on Wednesday, October 28, 2009 from 5:30 PM - 8:30 PM at the Anaheim Convention Center. Tour the exhibit hall and attend special conference sessions. Admission is free to the general public.
 
Not news, but an interesting postulation.
Quick Trip to Grid Parity with New Solar Distribution Channels
Oct 22, 2009

Hmmm. Seems like our solar industry’s crystal ball is a bit blurry these days. Or maybe we don’t like the picture. With prices for panels continuing to decline, and players entering and leaving the industry like a game of musical chairs, the solar industry of the future won’t resemble the industry of the past. We’re sailing into uncharted waters. It’s a good thing that we’re looking forward because the distribution channels of the future are likely to be quite disruptive (in a positive way) for our industry.
Two driving factors – lower prices and new distribution channels – remind me of the computer industry’s transition from mainframes in the 1970s to personal computers in the 1980s. Like the processors in PCs, solar panels themselves are become much cheaper. But as with PCs, solar power won’t become a mainstream product just because a few components are inexpensive; instead, new distribution channels will drive the industry towards mass-market adoption.
In 2008 the average price of a residential system was $8.00/watt. Even if the panels and inverters were free (amounting to about $4/watt), we still have indirect and direct labor costs of about $4.00/watt. Too expensive and too complicated for a mass market (we didn’t see very many home mainframe computers, either).
Simple, easy-to-install systems sold through new distribution channels have the potential to reduce these labor costs to $1.00/watt. Within a year or two it’s reasonable to expect panel prices in the range of $1.75/watt. Add in another $0.75/watt for an inverter and other BOS components and we’re at $2.50/watt. If systems were really easy to install, then electrical and HVAC contractors could join our installation workforce – doing all the installation related work for $0.75/watt. If systems were inherently safe we wouldn’t need any code-compliance paperwork, so the documentation can be drastically simplified and completed for $0.25/watt. That adds up to $3.50/watt – a price point at which existing tax credits and high electric rates would provide sufficient economic justification on their own.
The technology changes that will get us to this low price all relate to drastically simplifying the sales, design, engineering and installation costs for a system. Plug and play AC panels are the best way to achieve this goal. In the mean time, our industry is likely to continue with three distinct distribution channels: utility, commercial and residential. But it’s also likely that a new channel will emerge to serve the low end of the market – much the same as the personal computer industry grew in the early ‘80s out of the mainframe industry.
The area where low cost easy-to-install systems will have the most impact is for smaller residential and Do It Yourself (DIY) installations. Because of the dangers and complexity of high voltage DC systems, DIY solar has traditionally been inconceivable. But when a 1kw “solar in a box” product becomes available, it will open up the low end of the market just as PCs brought computing to the masses.
There are two types of companies that are likely to serve this new channel: traditional electrical or HVAC distributors, and big box hardware stores. They are both characterized by convenience and low prices, and are where the solar installers of the future are likely to shop. For years the solar industry has attempted to sell through these channels, but the parts count, design requirements and mounting systems have made it unfeasible to stock traditional DC panels and inverters. What used to take days to design, permit, order and receive should now fit in a single standardized retail box that a contractor loads in a truck in the morning on the way to the jobsite – like standard electrical supplies.
From an installation and a cost standpoint, most qualified electrical or HVAC contractors will have the right skills. Many “handy” homeowners will also take the plunge; perhaps they’ll just hire an electrician for $250 to install a dedicated PV branch circuit to the roof. The remaining work should not be much more difficult than installing a ceiling fan.
What’s extraordinarily significant about this new “contractor-retail” channel is that, because of the inherent safety and ease of installation of plug & play systems, there will be very little motivation for customers to go through the existing blizzard of permitting paperwork and interconnection documents. As a result, the indirect costs related to this paperwork will be eliminated, with negligible (or in the case of DIY) zero direct labor costs. Ironically, a professional solar contractor may still need to be hired to help with the paperwork to get the incentive – because that is the only remaining complicated part of an installation.
In this new channel – with labor and paperwork costs effectively reduced to zero, net system costs will be lower than the fully loaded costs of current utility, commercial and high-end residential installations. These lower net costs, coupled with typically higher marginal electric rates, will create short paybacks and lead to rapid market adoption. Customer buying habits may also change: small, simple PV systems will be purchased on a credit card. Need more power? Buy another 1kw of panels with your next paycheck.
Just as the availability of affordable home computers created the desktop software and add-on components industry, this new low-end solar channel is also likely to spawn an ecosystem of related companies and services. Naturally, electrical and HVAC contractors will participate in the solar boom. Supplemental services such as monitoring, panel cleaning, troubleshooting and energy management capabilities are likely to find a market.
 

BBC NEWS | Africa | Sahara Sun 'to help power Europe'

A sustainable energy initiative that will start with a huge solar project in the Sahara desert has been announced by a consortium of 12 European businesses.

The Desertec Industrial Initiative aims to supply Europe with 15% of its energy needs by 2050.

Companies who signed up to the $400bn (£240bn) venture include Deutsche Bank, Siemens and the energy provider E.On.

The consortium, which will be based in Munich, hopes to start supplying Europe with electricity by 2015.
 
More Solar Tiles
Clay Roof Integrated Solé Power Tile

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Solé Power Tile | Ceramic Tech Today
...What does a system like this run? 1,000 square feet of solar tile would cost about $25,000-$30,000 installed, but you can knock 30% off that cost after government energy rebates, plus state and local government incentives may be available to cut the cost. SRS Energy and US Tile are currently launching the Solé Power Tile system in select West Coast markets, and will begin a nationwide rollout of the product in spring of 2010...
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FAQ
 
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Solar technology goes retail as stores offer DIY systems | honoluluadvertiser.com | The Honolulu Advertiser

Very good news, except that the government rebates and utility permitting rules have a long way to go to catch up. Say someone buys one of these solar panels from their local Lowes store and installs it. Then he decides to continue buying another one each month until he has a complete system offsetting all his energy needs.

There's a big problem here: with each and every panel added he has to complete all the utility's paperwork and wait for the utility's approval for interconnection, and he's never going to get the government rebate because the government only rebates installations of 1 KW and above.

Great idea in theory, and you would expect such a product to make going solar a simple matter ... but in practice the red tape is going to make this a lot more difficult than it should be.