George (& others):Have you sent this to NYSEG and the County as a suggestion 
for our area? It seems so reasonable! I've seen solar panels on highway poles 
but not locally.

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--- On Sun, 8/2/09, George Frantz <[email protected]> wrote:

From: George Frantz <[email protected]>
Subject: [SustainableTompkins] Electricity-generating solar panels on 200, 000 
utility poles
To: "Sustainable Tompkins County listserv" 
<[email protected]>
Date: Sunday, August 2, 2009, 12:28 PM

I came across the following editorial from the Towanda PA, Sunday Review.  
Anybody else hear of utilities turning their transmission lines into energy 
sources through use of small scale solar electric panels?
George Frantz 
 
Editorial


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Northeast Pennsylvania power-line project has solar power lesson



Published: Sunday, August 2, 2009 3:10 AM EDT
As an electric utility’s continued effort to impose a massive 100-mile 
transmission line through Lackawanna, Luzerne, Wayne and Pike counties in 
northeast Pennsylavania in order to deliver power somewhere else, a New Jersey 
utility has begun to demonstrate the potential for locally generated power.

Although the PPL construction project does not directly affect Bradford and 
Sullivan counties geography, the lessons to be learned from the alternatives 
will be of benefit to all.

Public Service Electric & Gas Co., New Jersey’s largest utility, plans to 
install electricity-generating solar panels on 200,000 utility poles within its 
service territory. The project, approved last week by the New Jersey Board of 
Public Utilities, will make the Garden State second only to California in 
generation of solar power.

The company will spend about $515 million to establish 80 megawatts of 
generating power by 2013 — half from the pole-mounted panels and half from 
larger arrays that it will establish at some of its properties. In all, the 
project will produce enough power for about 80,000 homes. The project will 
raise rates by 10 cents per month, per customer.

One of the great advantages of the system is the power will be placed directly 
on the existing power grid. It will not have to be transmitted from a distant 
power plant. Each pole-mounted unit includes a device that converts the direct 
current produced by the solar cells into alternating current that can be added 
to the grid, pole by pole.

Reliance on long-range transmission is one of the major problems regarding 
energy. It is the cause of the PPL transmission line project. And the lack of 
an adequate grid recently was cited by Texas oilman T. Boone Pickens as the key 
reason for his postponement of building the world’s largest wind farm project 
on the Texas plains.

The New Jersey project also demonstrates the potential of alternative energy to 
help drive economic development. Petra Solar Inc., of South Plainfield, N.J., 
has the $200 million contract for the solar units. It plans to triple its 
existing work force by adding 100 full-time jobs.

Pennsylvania, like New Jersey, has imposed targets on utilities for alternative 
energy generation. State lawmakers and regulators should encourage Pennsylvania 
utilities, including First Energy and its subsidiary Penelec, which serves our 
area, to come up with innovative ideas, like the New Jersey project, not just 
to meet those goals but to reduce reliance on burdensome long-distance 
transmission.




Copyright © 2009 - The Daily and Sunday Review


      
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visit:  http://www.sustainabletompkins.org/

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