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Solar

American Solar Energy Society

American Solar Energy SocietyEstablished in 1954, the nonprofit American Solar Energy Society (ASES) is the nation's leading association of solar professionals & advocates. Our mission is to inspire an era of energy innovation and speed the transition to a sustainable energy economy. We advance education, research and policy.

Leading for more than 50 years
ASES leads national efforts to increase the use of solar energy, energy efficiency and other sustainable technologies in the U.S. We publish the award-winning SOLAR TODAY magazine, organize and present the ASES National Solar Conference and lead the ASES National Solar Tour – the largest grassroots solar event in the world.
 
Solar

Solar Water Heating 101

Courtesy of SolarRoofs.com

Solar Water Heaters have always been the first step when "going solar" due to low cost and high power density. The weight of conventional collectors made the installation very difficult and expensive until the advent of SolarRoofs.com's patented and proprietary series of light weight, affordable Skyline® collectors. Our efficiently designed solar thermal systems will save you money on energy no matter what energy source (gas, electricity, propane, oil, etc.) you currently use to heat your water.

Understanding the difference between solar thermal energy and solar electric energy is very important. Solar Electric is more commonly referred to as Photovoltaic (PV), in which energy from the sun is converted to electric power. Solar Thermal energy, however, simply uses energy from the sun to heat water. Both PV and Solar Thermal technologies can be used together or separately. While PV is used to power the electric needs of an entire home or building, Solar Thermal is an excellent choice for solar water heating.

The revolutionary light weight, attractive design of the Skyline® Solar Water Heater makes solar water heating truly practical for everyone. The 30% Federal Tax Credit and fast rising fuel costs make now the time to install a solar water heating system! Domestic solar water heaters are a cost effective way to generate hot water for your home. Appropriate in any climate, the fuel these systems use is FREE from the sun!

On average, water heaters use as much energy as a medium-sized car uses in a year. Each installed solar water heater is comparable to increasing the fuel mileage on the family car by over 60%. Supplementing millions of existing water heaters with SolarRoofs.com’s advanced solar thermal water heaters frees up huge amounts of limited energy resources that can then be used to produce electricity.

How Does a Solar Water Heater Work?

Solar water heaters do three basic operations before the hot water comes out of your faucet:


1. Energy Collection: Sunlight, short wave energy, is collected and converted to heat which is long wave energy. The solar collector is mounted on or near your home facing south. As the sunlight passes through the collector’s plastic or glass "glazing," it strikes a metal or rubber absorbing material. This material converts the sunlight into long wave heat, and the glazing prevents the heat from escaping much like a greenhouse. It is like leaving a car parked in the sun with its windows rolled up. The temperature inside a glazed solar collector on your roof can easily reach 300°F when there is no heat transfer fluid flowing through it.


The most common types of solar collectors used in solar water heaters are glazed flat plate collectors. A glazed flat plate collector consists of a shallow rectangular box with a transparent plastic or glass “window” covering a flat black plate or selective "Chrome" coating. The black plate is attached to a series of parallel tubes or one serpentine tube through which water, or other heat transfer fluids pass.


2. Energy Transfer: Circulating fluids like water in an "Open Loop" or Propylene Glycol in a "Closed Loop" transfer the collected energy in the form of heat to a storage tank. Heat energy is transferred from the collector to the water storage tank. In some water heaters, hot fluid is pumped from the collector to the storage tank. The pump is powered by electricity that either comes from an electrical wall outlet or a small photovoltaic module located near the collector.


3. Energy Storage: Solar-heated water is stored in an insulated tank until you need it. Hot water is drawn off the tank when tap water is used, and cold make-up water enters at the bottom of the tank. If additional heat is needed, it is provided by electricity or fossil fuel energy by the conventional “backup” water-heating system.

 

Solar water heaters tend to have larger hot water storage capacity than conventional water heaters. This is because solar heat is available only during the day and sufficient hot water must be collected to meet evening and morning requirements.

How well an active solar energy system performs depends on effective siting, system design, location, and installation. Solar thermal water heating systems, which use the sun's energy rather than electricity or gas to heat water, can efficiently provide 50 to 90% of your hot water needs—without fuel cost or pollution and with minimal operation and maintenance expense.

 

Courtesy of http://www.solarroofs.com 

Wind

BWEA

BWEABWEA is the trade and professional body for the UK wind and marine renewables industries. Formed in 1978, and with 522 corporate members, BWEA is the leading renewable energy trade association in the UK. Wind has been the world's fastest growing renewable energy source for the last seven years, and this trend is expected to continue with falling costs of wind energy and the urgent international need to tackle CO2 emissions to prevent climate change.
Solar

SEPA Solar Electric Power Association

SEPA Solar Electric Power AssociationThe Solar Electric Power Association (SEPA) is your unbiased non-profit resource for information about solar technologies, policies, and programs.  SEPA focuses on working with electric utilities, but provides value to all businesses that have an interest in solar electricity. 
Alternative Energy

Sea Turbines

Sea Turbines

Marine Current Turbines (MCT) is the world leader and first mover in marine current and tidal stream energy. The company has two primary goals: technology development and commercial project development/installation. MCT's world lead in the development of this new technology, has at last opened the door to the until-now unreachable power of the oceans. 

MCT installed the world’s first offshore tidal turbine near Lynmouth off the coast of Devon in May 2003 and completed installation and commissioning of the world’s first commercial scale tidal turbine, the 1.2 MW SeaGen, in Strangford Narrows in Northern Ireland in 2008.  This is the forerunner for a commercial product soon to be widely deployed in the vital quest for clean energy from the oceans.

Alternative Energy

Energy Planet

Energy Planet

An excellent and comprehensive directory of Alternative Energy sites, news and press releaes.

Detail page includes 4 x 4 snapshot of home page of target site along with text describing site (not their about us from Summary) and keywords and pros and cons.  

local, local, local - local seciton - best local green sites to start with 

http://www.energyplanet.info/

Solar

Solar Aid Charity

Solar Aid CharityPower to the people
Two of the biggest threats facing humanity today are climate change and global poverty. SolarAid helps to combat both, simply by bringing clean, renewable power to the poorest people in the world.
Solar

Small Solar Generators

Small Solar Generators

Using parts easily available from your local stores, you can make a solar power generator. Great for power failures and life outside the power grid. Have one in the office store-room in case of power failures in your highrise.

 Try Creating New SubSect/Cats - For use in Menus  MenuSolarKitsSection - MenuHowtoGenerators -  floating menus to apply to different pages

Wind

Navitas Energy

Navitas Energy

Navitas Energy, Inc. is a leading commercial wind power developer, dedicated to providing customers with low cost, high quality, reliable wind power generation.

Navitas Energy generates a cleaner environment with each wind farm that we build.  We sell wind energy to electric utilities, co-ops and municipals who want to give their customers the "power to choose ... a cleaner environment."  Investing in wind energy ensures a cleaner future for us all and will pay dividends in clean air for future generations.

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SeaGen Water Turbine

SeaGen Water Turbine

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