Friday, December 30, 2016

SolarYpsi’s Nonprofit Project has been highlighted in Home Power Magazine

SolarYpsi’s Nonprofit Project has been highlighted in Home Power Magazine. Early in 2015, a benefactor contacted SolarYpsi wanting to fund more PV installations in Ypsilanti. Since SolarYpsi is not a 501(c)3, it was determined that the best course of action would be to put together a list of nonprofits interested in having a PV system and the donor would choose from the list.  The donor contributed a total of $93,000 for 5 kW PV systems at a public library, two com­munity centers, a public high school, a health center, and a city-owned carport.


Interested in sharing solar experiences or information?  You can share on Facebook at facebook.com/groups/MiSolarUsers or send me a note to include in next week’s MiSUN Weekly.

2glrea.org/solar/mi-sun

Friday, December 23, 2016

The world is run by those who show up - time for Ann Arbor solar advocates to show up!

The world is run by those who show up - time for Ann Arbor solar advocates to show up!

This email string includes comments I've received from AA SUN members and supporters regarding the recent Energy Commission Report on Solar Taxation in Ann Arbor and the subsequent and related MLive story.  Some have encouraged me to ask AA Members to lobby their city council representatives. 

1. What AA SUN Can't Do - As a Mi SUN Chapter, AA SUN is bound by legal rules that apply to the Great Lakes Renewable Energy Association (a 501(c)3 Non Profit Association formed in 1991 and supported by members to educate and advocate for renewable energy in the Great Lakes).  Neither GLREA nor its member organizations (MI SUN and Chapters) may engage in lobbying activities.  AA SUN’s primary and sole vehicle for affecting public policy is education.

2. What AA SUN Can do - AA SUN’s primary and sole vehicle for affecting public policy is education.  AA SUN encourages its members and supporters to educate policy makers and thought leaders in Ann Arbor about issues that impact the viability of solar energy in our community.  Within this context, the Energy Commission Solar Taxation Report and MLive story are public documents and tools which you are free to use - or not use - as educational tools.   

3. What individual AA SUN Members Can Do - AA SUN members may lobby and/or educate as individuals who just happen to belong to AA SUN along with several other organizations that support enlightened solar public policies (e.g., Sierra Club of Huron Valley, Ecology Center, etc.). 

NOTE - AA Stakeholder Members, such as Sierra Club of Huron Valley, can lobby, if they so choose, on behalf of enlightened solar taxation policies (contact: Sierra Club Huron Valley Group, Nancy Shiffler,Chair, Sierra Club Huron Valley Group (nshiffler@comcast.net) andEd Steinman (HVGsierraclub@gmail.com, lighthawk.pilot@gmail.com).

The best thing we can all do is help grow AA SUN's Membership!  Elections are just two years away.

Mark Clevey

Founder/Organizer, AA SUN 
2glrea.org/solar/mi-sun

Wednesday, December 21, 2016

Will your taxes go up if you install solar panels? In Ann Arbor, yes.

ANN ARBOR, MI - Greg McGuire and his wife, Emily, live in the Old West Side historic district near downtown Ann Arbor.

A few years ago, they decided to add something new to their turn-of-the-century home: rooftop solar panels.

Not only was the 4.3-kilowatt system going to help them do their part for the environment by producing clean energy, it was going to be a financially prudent investment. Or so they thought until their taxes went up.

More ...


2glrea.org/solar/mi-sun

Friday, December 2, 2016

GLREA / American Solar Energy Society Conference




ASES SOLAR 2017 Call for Participation

The American Solar Energy Society (ASES) has teamed up with the U.S. DOE Solar Decathlon collegiate building competition for an extra-ordinary event-filled two weeks in Denver, Colorado October 5-15, 2017. ASES's 46th annual conference, "SOLAR 2017: Building a 100% Renewable Energy Community," will be held October 9-12, in between the weekends of public days at the Decathlon. ASES is working with Decathlon organizers to create additional educational, sustainability, and networking events for a fun, rewarding time for people of all ages to celebrate solar energy and sustainability in buildings.


SOLAR 2017 Opportunities to Present

You may submit abstracts or proposals for the following types of presentations, using the SOLAR 2017 topical areas (listed further below) as a guide:

  • Posters: This is a great way to get exposure to a larger audience: your poster will be up for the entire SOLAR 2017 conference, in addition to your presence at the poster session.
  • Technical sessions: ASES will review your abstract(s) and assign them to the appropriate technical sessions. You will have an additional opportunity to have your work placed into the conference proceedings.
  • ~switch talks: you have only 5 minutes to share your ideas or research in this popular fast-paced session.
  • Forums: you propose a topic as well as organize the speakers to address this topic. A limited number of time slots are available for Forums.
  • Workshops: if you are a trainer or teacher and wish to propose an educational workshop, we will allot time either before or after the ASES conference (NOT during the conference) for workshops. Workshops will have registration fees separate from the conference fees, and teachers/trainers may be paid a stipend from these fees.

Topical Areas
  • Progress to 100% Renewable Energy  
    • What is working at the local, regional and/or national level and why?
    • PACE and other financing
    • Renewables working together
    • Community solar
    • Critical role of renewable energy in climate, air quality, water, food, and all other aspects of sustainable living
  • Technology Innovations
    • Resource assessment
    • Solar & wind energy technologies
    • Energy storage, vehicle to grid, vehicle to building
    • Transportation, electric vehicles
    • Grid integration, smart grids, micro-grids, grid management
    • Energy efficiency
    • Integrated building controls
    • Tiny houses
  • Education and Community Building
    • Programs to raise public awareness and action
    • Teaching renewable energy in the classroom
    • Renewables in sports
    • Strategies to advance contributions of emerging professionals
    • Tools for advocates
  • The 41st National Passive Solar Conference will also be part of SOLAR 2017, and will include the following topics
    • Passive solar heating and cooling strategies to achieve 100% renewable energy in buildings
    • Design tools, simulation, performance measurement and controls
    • Building science implications in sustainable and carbon neutral design
    • Building integrated renewable energy strategies
    • Innovation, efficiency, renewables and market demand
    • Case studies

Presenters will have the option to submit a paper for the conference proceedings.

Visit solar2017.org for more details.  



Questions - Contact solar2017@ases.org. Deadline: April 1, 2017.

Saturday, November 26, 2016

Michigan Legislature Wants to Penalize Solar Installations

The Michigan Senate has passed energy bills and while they are better than the originals bills including keeping net metering, they now include a “grid access charge” which could be used to make homeowner solar systems uneconomic.  The Senate energy bills now go to the Michigan House of Representatives.  Please contact your State Rep and let him or her know that a “grid charge” is a really bad idea.  It is a solar tax to discourage residential solar systems.  

See Michigan Energy Policy –Time for You to Act


2glrea.org/solar/mi-sun

Monday, November 21, 2016

One thing the election has showed us - we need MORE Solar Vigilance!  And so, we are conducting an AA SUN Membership Drive.  

Please use the Attached AA Membership Flyer to encourage BOTH Solar Users and Solar Stakeholders to join AA SUN.   

AA SUN Stakeholders Members can be schools that teach solar, Houses of Worship that support Creation Care, employers, elected officials, friends, the Hands-on-Museum, your social organizations, environmental organizations, businesses that sell related energy-efficiency products, car dealerships that sell electric vehicles that can be re-charged with solar PV, stores that sell Solar Lights and Portable Solar Charging systems, landscaping services, builders, architects, school teachers/ principals/superintendents/school board members, friends, family, etc.  

PLEASE help AA SUN help Ann Arbor meet OUR Climate Action Plan goals!

Mark H. Clevey

AA SUN Founder/Organizer    


SIERRA CLUB FILES PETITION TO EPA TO DECLARE GELMAN PLUME A SUPERFUND SITE

FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE:                          November 21, 2016
CONTACT:                                                                                               Nancy Shiffler, 734-971-1157, nshiffler@comcast.net

SIERRA CLUB FILES PETITION TO EPA
TO DECLARE GELMAN PLUME A SUPERFUND SITE

Conservation Group in Joint Action with Ann Arbor Charter Township 
and Scio Township  Requesting Federal Action from USEPA

[Ann Arbor, Michigan]: Ann Arbor Charter Township, Scio Township, and the Sierra Club – Huron Valley Group jointly filed a petition on November 21, 2016 requesting the United States Environmental Protection Agency (USEPA) conduct a Preliminary Assessment for the Gelman Sciences, Inc. (Gelman) Site to become a federal USEPA Superfund Site.  The petition can be found at goo.gl/3yWwzB.  

Wastewater disposal practices at the former Gelman plant located in Scio Township, near Ann Arbor, contaminated on-site and off-site groundwater with the known carcinogen 1,4-dioxane.  The dioxane groundwater plume, which currently is about four miles long and one mile wide, has polluted local lakes, creeks, residential drinking water wells, and a City of Ann Arbor municipal water supply well. 

The Gelman Site is under a 1992 Consent Judgment between the Michigan Department of Environmental Quality (DEQ) and Gelman Sciences, Inc.  However, the Petitioners believe that the court remedy and DEQ actions do not adequately protect public health.  

“Local governments and community groups long have worked with the DEQ on remediation options for the Gelman Site and a dioxane cleanup standard that protects human health and is consistent with EPA policy.  Unfortunately, DEQ has not demonstrated the capability or willingness to obtain a protective remedy in court that places the burden for clean-up squarely on the potentially responsible party,”  said Michael Moran, Supervisor, Ann Arbor Charter Township.

The dioxane plume continues to migrate in all directions with no effective off-site hydraulic control.  Numerous Scio Township and Ann Arbor Charter Township private residential drinking water wells are down-gradient of the plume in  east, west and north directions.  The City of Ann Arbor’s main drinking water supply comes from the Huron River at Barton Pond, which potentially could be impacted as the dioxane plume expands.  A large portion of the off-site dioxane plume is greater  than 1,000 ug/L, while the USEPA dioxane drinking water criterion is 0.35 ug/L (parts-per-billion) at a 1 in 1,000,000 excess lifetime cancer risk level. 

“Many Scio Township drinking water wells have been contaminated with dioxane, yet the DEQ and the Consent Judgment allow the dioxane plume to expand towards many more Township wells.  USEPA can do a better job of clean-up than the DEQ. ” said Spaulding Clark, Supervisor – Scio Township.  The group believes that the USEPA cleanup will be superior to the DEQ approach as USEPA will restore the polluted  aquifer to a drinking water criterion, provide a Contingency Plan for Barton Pond, provide alternative potable water supplies now to potentially impact homes, and utilize a scientifically sound drinking water criterion.  

The Gelman Site today is owned by PALL Life Sciences, Inc., a wholly owned subsidiary of Danaher Corporation, and there are no active plant operations.  Historically, the plant manufactured filter devices and used dioxane as a solvent.  It is estimated that 800,000 pounds of dioxane was used between 1966 and 1986 with most being discharged to soil, surface water, and groundwater through seepage lagoons, land spray irrigation, and direct discharges at the site.   

“The Sierra Club believes as in Flint, Michigan that due to lax DEQ enforcement, the USEPA is required to assist the local community with this large groundwater contamination which presents an imminent and substantial endangerment to public health and the environment.” said Nancy Shiffler,  Chair of the Sierra Club, Huron Valley Group.

The group will continue to provide an opportunity for City of Ann Arbor, Ann Arbor Charter Township, and Scio Township residents that may be affected by the dioxane release from the Gelman Site to support their petition by electronically signing a supporting document.  The supporting document can be found at goo.gl/QyhFJz-.  

###


CONTACT:


Michael Moran - Ann Arbor Charter Township – Supervisor – 734-663-3418
Spaulding Clark - Scio Township – Supervisor – 734-369-9400
Nancy Shiffler - Sierra Club–Huron Valley Group – Chair – 734-971-1157

The Sierra Club is the nation’s largest grassroots environmental organization, with 2.4 million members and supporters nationwide, and over 80,000 of them in Michigan.

Friday, November 18, 2016

Solar Roadways recently unveiled its first public installation at a downtown plaza in a northern Idaho resort town

Solar Roadways recently unveiled its first public installation at a downtown plaza in a northern Idaho resort town - 150 square feet of hexagon-shaped solar panels that people can walk and bicycle on. The company is working on proving that the panels are strong enough and have enough traction to handle motor vehicles, including semitrailers. Solar Roadways has been testing the strength of its half-inch-thick glass by dropping 1-pound steel balls on it from a height of 8 feet, a standard test for concrete. So far, the tests have been successful.  The panels can currently be used for sidewalks, driveways and parking lots. Solar Roadways wants to set up a manufacturing facility for the glass panels as early as next year.

Interested in sharing solar experiences or information?  You can share on Facebook at www.facebook.com/groups/MiSolarUsers or send me a note to include in next week’s MiSUN Weekly.

Sunday, November 6, 2016

The Sierra Club Huron Valley Group endorses the goals of AA SUN

The Sierra Club Huron Valley Group endorses the goals, principles and positions of the Ann Arbor Solar Users Network (AA SUN) and has joined AA SUN as a Stakeholder Member.


Here are AA SUN Newsletters to date: