A successful test of tidal power in Maine is being called “the fulfillment of the aborted Quoddy Tides power project [...]
Tidal Power in Maine
Posted by Solar Energy USA on 08/26/2010Solar Trivia
Posted by Solar Energy USA on 08/19/2010Here is an interesting bit of trivia. Who invented the first solar cell and in what year? The answer is [...]
Solar Lightbulbs
Posted by Solar Energy USA on 08/16/2010Here is a great article about how solar light bulbs (counter intuitive, I suppose, but there is a small battery [...]
Solar Power as Art
Posted by Solar Energy USA on 08/13/2010Only in Dubai. Actually, it is only a proposal at this point and an entry into something called the Land [...]
U.S. SOLAR MARKET TRENDS
Posted by Solar Energy USA on 08/10/2010I know it’s a ton of information to digest, but if you have a passion for keeping up with the [...]
Clark Howard Goes Solar!
Posted by Solar Energy USA on 08/06/2010Clark Howard has gone solar. He tweeted the following: “I have gone solar!! Is it a smart financial decision? I’ll [...]
Sports and Solar – Patriot Place gets major solar power installation
Posted by Solar Energy USA on 08/05/2010It was only a few days ago that I blogged about the installation of a system at Pocono Raceway. Now, [...]
Grid Parity Is Here
Posted by Solar Energy USA on 08/05/2010Well, maybe not everywhere but it won’t just be out West very soon. Here is a great article I found [...]
New Solar Energy Conversion Process Could Double Solar Efficiency of Solar Cells
Posted by Solar Energy USA on 08/03/2010Yet another promising announcement about some potentially outstanding advancements being made to improve the efficiencies of Solar technology…….check out the [...]
Nuclear Energy Loses Cost Advantage of Solar Energy
Posted by Solar Energy USA on 08/02/2010Solar photovoltaic systems have long been painted as a clean way to generate electricity, but expensive compared with other alternatives to oil, like nuclear power. No longer. In a “historic crossover,” the costs of solar photovoltaic systems have declined to the point where they are lower than the rising projected costs of new nuclear plants, according to a paper published this month.


