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India is densely populated and has high solar insolation, an ideal combination for using solar power in India. India is already a leader in wind power generation. In the solar energy sector, some large projects have been proposed, and a 35,000 km2 area of the Thar Desert has been set aside for solar power projects, sufficient to generate 700 GW to 2,100 GW. In July 2009, India unveiled a US$19 billion plan to produce 20 GW of solar power by 2020.[1] Under the plan, the use of solar-powered equipment and applications would be made compulsory in all government buildings, as well as hospitals and hotels.[2] On November 18, 2009, it was reported that India was ready to launch its National Solar Mission under the National Action Plan on Climate Change, with plans to generate 1,000 MW of power by 2013.[3]
Contents
[hide]
1 Current status
1.1 Installed capacity 1.2 Still unaffordable 1.3 Solar engineering training 2.1 Rural electrification 2.2 Agricultural support 2.3 Solar water heaters 3.1 Land scarcity 3.2 Slow progress
2 Future applications
10%, this would still be a thousand times greater than the domestic electricity demand projected for 2015.[4][6]
Name of Plant
Notes
Sivaganga Photovoltaic 5 Plant[11] Kolar Photovoltaic Plant[12] 3 Itnal Photovoltaic Plant, 3 Belgaum[13] Azure Power - Photovoltaic 2 Plant[14] Jamuria Photovoltaic Plant[15] 2 NDPC Photovoltaic Plant[16] 1 Thyagaraj stadium Plant1 Delhi[17] Gandhinagar Solar Plant[18] 1 Tata - Mulshi, 3 Maharashtra[19] Azure Power - Sabarkantha, 10 Gujarat[20] Moser Baer - Patan, 30 Gujarat[21] Tata - Mayiladuthurai, Tamil 1 Nadu[22] REHPL - Sadeipali, 1 (Bolangir) Orissa [23] Total 58
Completed December 2010 Completed May 2010 Completed April 2010 2009 2009 2010 April, 2010 January 21, 2011 Commissioned April 2011 Commissioned June 2011 To Be Commissioned July 2011 Commissioned July 2011 Commissioned July 2011
country.[24][25] The cost of production ranges from 15 to 30 per unit compared to around 5 to 8 per unit for conventional thermal energy.[26]
Land is a scarce resource in India and per capita land availability is low. Dedication of land area for exclusive installation of solar arrays might have to compete with other necessities that require land. The amount of land required for utility-scale solar power plantscurrently approximately 1 km2 for every 2060 megawatts (MW) generated[7]could pose a strain on India's available land resource. The architecture more suitable for most of India would be a highly-distributed set of individual rooftop power generation systems, all connected via a local grid.[7] However, erecting such an infrastructure, which does not enjoy the economies of scale possible in mass, utility-scale, solar panel deployment, needs the market price of solar technology deployment to substantially decline, so that it attracts the individual and average family size household consumer. That might be possible in the future, because PV is projected to continue its current cost reductions for the next decades and be able to compete with fossil fuel.[4]
The development of wind power in India began in the 1990s, and has significantly increased in the last few years. Although a relative newcomer to the wind industry compared with Denmark or the US, India has the fifth largest installed wind power capacity in the world.[1] In 2009-10 India's growth rate was highest among the other top four countries. As of 31 March 2011 the installed capacity of wind power in India was 14550[2] MW, mainly spread across Tamil Nadu (5904.40 MW), Maharashtra (2310.70 MW), Gujarat (2175.60 MW), Karnataka (1730.10 MW), Rajasthan (1524.70 MW), Madhya Pradesh (275.50 MW), Andhra Pradesh (200.20 MW), Kerala (32.8 MW), Orissa (2MW),[3][4] West Bengal (1.1 MW) and other states (3.20 MW) [5]. It is estimated that 6,000 MW of additional wind power capacity will be installed in India by 2012.[6] Wind power accounts for 6% of India's total installed power capacity, and it generates 1.6% of the country's power.[7] India is currently preparing a wind atlas.
[8]
Contents
[hide]
2.1 Tamil Nadu (5904.40 MW) 2.2 Maharashtra (5310.70 MW) 2.3 Gujarat (2175.60 MW) 2.4 Karnataka (1730.10 MW) 2.5 Rajasthan (1524.70 MW) 2.6 Madhya Pradesh (275.50 MW) 2.7 Kerala (32 MW) 2.8 West Bengal (1.10MW)
[edit] Overview
India is the world's fifth largest wind power producer, with an annual power production of 8,896 MW.[9] Shown here is a wind farm in Kayathar, Tamil Nadu. The worldwide installed capacity of wind power reached 197 GW by the end of 2010. China (44,733 MW), US (40,180 MW), Germany (27,215 MW) and Spain (20,676 MW) are ahead of India in fifth position.[10] The short gestation periods for installing wind turbines, and the
increasing reliability and performance of wind energy machines has made wind power a favored choice for capacity addition in India.[11] Suzlon, as Indian-owned company, emerged on the global scene in the past decade, and by 2006 had captured almost 7.7 percent of market share in global wind turbine sales. Suzlon is currently the leading manufacturer of wind turbines for the Indian market, holding some 52 percent of market share in India. Suzlons success has made India the developing country leader in advanced wind turbine technology.[12]
Wind turbiness in Tamil Nadu In February 2009, Shriram EPC bagged INR 700 million contract for setting up of 60 units of 250 KW (totaling 15 MW) wind turbines in Tirunelveli district by Cape Energy.[15] Enercon is also playing a major role in development of wind energy in India. In Tamil Nadu, Coimbatore and Tiruppur Districts having more wind Mills from 2002 onwards,specially, Chittipalayam, Kethanoor, Gudimangalam, Poolavadi, Murungappatti (MGV Place), Sunkaramudaku, KongalNagaram, Gomangalam, Anthiur, Edyarpalayam, Bogampatti, Puliya Marathu Palayam, Chandrapuram are the high wind power production places in the both districts.
Both projects are expected to become operational by early next year, according to government sources. The Gujarat government, which is banking heavily on wind power, has identified Samana as an ideal location for installation of 450 turbines that can generate a total of 360 MW. To encourage investment in wind energy development in the state, the government has introduced a raft of incentives including a higher wind energy tariff. Samana has a high tension transmission grid and electricity generated by wind turbines can be fed into it. For this purpose, a substation at Sadodar has been installed. Both projects are being executed by Enercon Ltd, a joint venture between Enercon of Germany and Mumbai-based Mehra group.[17] ONGC Ltd has commissioned its first wind power project. The 51 MW project is located at Motisindholi in Kutch district of Gujarat. ONGC had placed the EPC order on Suzlon Energy in January 2008, for setting up the wind farm comprising 34 turbines of 1.5 MW each. Work on the project had begun in February 2008, and it is learnt that the first three turbines had begun production within 43 days of starting construction work. Power from this 308 crore captive wind farm will be wheeled to the Gujarat state grid for onward use by ONGC at its Ankleshwar, Ahmedabad, Mehsana and Vadodara centres. ONGC has targeted to develop a captive wind power capacity of around 200 MW in the next two years.[18]
Rajasthan with a capacity of around 11 mW. Expected to cost around 60 crore, the wind farm will meet the power requirements of the company's Lakheri cement unit where capacity was raised from 0.9 million tpa to 1.5 million tpa through a modernisation plan. For ACC, this would be the second wind power project after the 9 mW farm at Udayathoor in Tirunelvelli district of Tamil Nadu.[citation needed] Rajasthan is emerging as an important destination for new wind farms, although it is currently not amongst the top five states in terms of installed capacity. As of 2007 end, this northern state had a total of 496 mW, accounting for a 6.3 per cent share in India's total capacity.[citation needed]
Suzlon will invest around 250 crore initially, without taking recourse to the funding available from the Indian Renewable Energy Development Agency (Ireda), said Gon Chaudhuri. He said there are five wind-power units in West Bengal, at Frazerganj, generating a total of around 1 MW. At Sagar Island, there is a composite wind-diesel plant generating 1 MW. In West Bengal, power companies are being encouraged to buy power generated by units based on renewable energy. The generating units are being offered special rates. S Banerjee, private secretary to the power minister, said this had encouraged the private sector companies to invest in this field.[citation
needed]
Satara Dist.
Maharashtra 259 Tamil Nadu Tamil Nadu Kerala Tamil Nadu Tamil Nadu Andhra Pradesh Gujarat Tamil Nadu Madhya Pradesh Karnataka Tamil Nadu Tamil Nadu Andhra Pradesh Tamil Nadu Tamil Nadu Tamil Nadu 33 30 25 22 21 20 15 15 14 14 12 11 10 10 10 20.4
Aban Loyd Chiles Kanyakumari Offshore Ltd. Kayathar Subhash Subhash Ltd. Kayathar Ramakkalmedu Subhash Ltd. Ramakkalmedu Muppandal Wind Muppandal Wind Farm Muppandal Gudimangalam Gudimangalam Wind Farm Gudimangalam Puthlur RCI Lamda Danida Chennai Mohan Jamgudrani MP Jogmatti BSES Perungudi Newam Kethanur Wind Farm Hyderabad APSRTC Muppandal Madras Poolavadi Chettinad Wescare (India) Ltd. Danida India Ltd. Mohan Breweries & Distilleries Ltd. MP Windfarms Ltd. BSES Ltd. Newam Power Company Ltd. Kethanur Wind Farm Puthlur Lamda Chennai Dewas Chitradurga Dist Perungudi Kethanur
Andhra Pradesh State Road Hyderabad Transport Corp. Madras Cements Ltd. Muppandal Chettinad Cement Corp. Poolavadi Ltd. Shalivahana Green Energy. Shalivahana Wind Tirupur Ltd.
[21]
[edit] Barriers
Initial cost for wind turbines is greater than that of conventional fossil fuel generators per MW installed. Noise is produced by the rotor blades. This is not normally an issue in the locations chosen for most wind farms and research by Salford University[22] shows that noise complaints for wind farms in the UK are almost non-existent.
[edit] Future
The Ministry of New and Renewable Energy (MNRE) has fixed a target of 10,500 MW between 200712, but an additional generation capacity of only about 6,000 MW might be available for commercial use by 2012Solar panels use light energy (photons) from the sun to generate electricity through the photovoltaic effect. The structural (load carrying) member of a module can either be the top layer or the back layer. The majority of modules use wafer-based crystalline silicon cells or thin-film cells based on cadmium telluride or silicon. The conducting wires that take the current off the panels may contain silver, copper or other conductive (but generally not magnetic) transition metals. The cells must be connected electrically to one another and to the rest of the system. Cells must also be protected from mechanical damage and moisture. Most solar panels are rigid, but semiflexible ones are available, based on thin-film cells. Electrical connections are made in series to achieve a desired output voltage and/or in parallel to provide a desired current capability. Separate diodes may be needed to avoid reverse currents, in case of partial or total shading, and at night. The p-n junctions of mono-crystalline silicon cells may have adequate reverse current characteristics that these are not necessary. Reverse currents waste power and can also lead to overheating of shaded cells. Solar cells become less efficient at higher temperatures and installers try to provide good ventilation behind solar panels.[1] Some recent solar panel designs include concentrators in which light is focused by lenses or mirrors onto an array of smaller cells. This enables the use of cells with a high cost per unit area (such as gallium arsenide) in a cost-effective way.[citation needed] Depending on construction, photovoltaic panels can produce electricity from a range of frequencies of light, but usually cannot cover the entire solar range (specifically, ultraviolet, infrared and low or diffused light). Hence much of the incident sunlight energy is wasted by solar panels, and they can give far higher efficiencies if illuminated with monochromatic light. Therefore another design concept is to split the light into different wavelength ranges and direct the beams onto different cells tuned to those ranges.[2] This has been projected to be capable of raising efficiency by 50%. The use of infrared photovoltaic cells has also been proposed to increase efficiencies, and perhaps produce power at night.[citation needed] Currently the best achieved sunlight conversion rate (solar panel efficiency) is around 21% in commercial products[3], typically lower than the efficiencies of their cells in isolation. The Energy Density of a solar panel is the efficiency described in terms of peak power output per unit of surface area, commonly expressed in units of Watts per square foot (W/ft2). The most efficient mass-produced solar panels have energy density values of greater than 13 W/ft2 (140 W/m2).
Most solar modules are currently produced from silicon PV cells. These are typically categorized into either monocrystalline or multicrystalline modules.
Several companies have begun embedding electronics into PV modules. This enables performing Maximum Power Point Tracking (MPPT) for each module individually, and the measurement of performance data for monitoring and fault detection at module level. Some of these solutions make use of Power Optimizers, a DC to DC converter technology developed to maximize the power harvest from solar photovoltaic systems.
[edit] Production
15.9 GW of solar PV system installations were completed in 2010, with solar PV pricing survey and market research company PVinsights reporting growth of 117.8% in solar PV installation on a year-on-year basis. With over 100% year-on-year growth in PV system installation, PV module makers dramatically increased their shipments of solar panels in 2010. They actively expanded their capacity and turned themselves into gigawatt GW players. According to PVinsights, five of the top ten PV module companies in 2010 are GW players. Suntech, First Solar, Sharp, Yingli and Trina Solar are GW producers now, and most of them doubled their shipments in 2010.[7]
The windwheel of the Greek engineer Heron of Alexandria in the 1st century AD is the earliest known instance of using a wind-driven wheel to power a machine.[4][5] Another early example of a wind-driven wheel was the prayer wheel, which was used in ancient Tibet and China since the 4th century.[6] It has been claimed that the Babylonian emperor Hammurabi planned to use wind power for his ambitious irrigation project in the 17th century BC.[7]
Horizontal windmills
The Persian horizontal windmill The first practical windmills had sails that rotated in a horizontal plane, around a vertical axis.[8] They were invented in eastern Persia (what is now Afghanistan), as recorded by the Persian geographer Estakhri in the 9th century.[9][10] The authenticity of an earlier anecdote of a windmill involving the second caliph Umar (AD 634644) is questioned on the grounds that it appears in a 10th-century document.[11] Made of six to twelve sails covered in reed matting or cloth material, these windmills were used to grind grain or draw up water, and were quite different from the later European vertical windmills. Windmills were in widespread use across the Middle East and Central Asia, and later spread to China and India from there.[12] A similar type of horizontal windmill with rectangular blades, used for irrigation, can also be found in 13th-century China (during the Jurchen Jin Dynasty in the north), introduced by the travels of Yel Chucai to Turkestan in 1219.[13]
Hooper's Mill, Margate, Kent. An 18th Century European horizontal windmill Horizontal windmills were built, in small numbers, in Europe during the eighteenth and nineteenth centuries,[8] for example Fowler's Mill at Battersea in London, and Hooper's Mill at Margate in Kent. These early modern examples seem not to have been directly influenced by the horizontal windmills of the Middle and Far East, but to have been independent inventions by engineers influenced by the Industrial Revolution.[14]
Vertical windmills
There is an ongoing debate among historians on whether and how the windmill from the middle East influenced the development of the early European windmill.[15][16][17][18] In northwestern Europe, the horizontal-axis or vertical windmill (so called due to the plane of the movement of its sails) is believed to date from the last quarter of the 12th century in the triangle of northern France, eastern England and Flanders. The earliest certain reference to a windmill in Europe (assumed to have been of the vertical type) dates from 1185, in Weedley, Yorkshire, although a number of earlier but less certainly dated twelfth century European sources referring to windmills have also been found.[19] These earliest mills were used to grind cereals.
Post mill
A windmill on the background of the 1792 Battle of Valmy, France. Main article: Post mill The evidence at present is that the earliest type of European windmill was the post mill, so named because of the large upright post on which the mill's main structure (the "body" or "buck") is balanced. By mounting the body this way, the mill is able to rotate to face the wind direction; an essential requirement for windmills to operate economically in North-Western Europe, where wind directions are variable. The body contains all the milling machinery. The first post mills were of the sunken type where the post was buried in an earth mound to support it. Later a wooden support was developed called the trestle. This was often covered over or surrounded by a roundhouse to protected the trestle from the weather and to provide storage space. This type of windmill was the most common in Europe until the 19th century when more powerful tower and smock mills replaced them.
Hollow-post mill
In a hollow-post mill the post on which the body is mounted is hollowed out, to accommodate the drive shaft.[20] In this way it is possible to drive machinery below or outside the body while still being able to rotate the body into the wind. Hollow-post mills driving scoop wheels were used in the Netherlands to drain wetlands from the 14th century onwards.
Tower mill
Main article: Tower mill By the end of the thirteenth century the masonry tower mill, on which only the cap is rotated rather than the whole body of the mill, had been introduced. The spread of tower mills came with a growing economy that called for larger and more stable sources of power though they were more expensive to build. In contrast to the post mill, only the cap of the tower mill needs to be turned into the wind, so the main structure can be made much taller, allowing the sails to be made longer, which enables them to provide useful work even in low winds. The cap can be turned into the wind either by winches or gearing inside the cap or from a winch on the tail pole outside the mill. A method of keeping the cap and sails into the wind automatically is by using a fantail, a small windmill mounted at right angles to the sails, at the rear of the windmill. These are also fitted to tail poles of post mills and are common in Great Britain and English-speaking countries of the former British Empire, Denmark and Germany but rare in other places. Tower mills with a fixed cap are found around the Mediterranean Sea. They are built with the sails facing the prevailing wind direction.
Smock mill
Main article: Smock mill The smock mill is a later development of the tower mill where the tower is replaced by a wooden framework, called the "smock." The smock is commonly of octagonal plan, though examples with more, or fewer, sides exist. The smock is thatched, boarded or covered by other materials like slate, sheet metal or tar paper. The lighter construction in comparison to tower mills make smock mills practical as drainage mills as these often had to be built in areas with unstable subsoil. Having originated as a drainage mill, smock mills are also used for a variety of purposes.
When used in a built-up area it is often placed on a masonry base to raise it above the surrounding buildings.
Smock mill De 1100 Roe, Amsterdam, Netherlands, built in 1757, type called a grondzeiler ("ground sailer") by the Dutch , since the sails almost reach the ground.
Sails
Main article: Windmill sail Common sails consist of a lattice framework on which a sailcloth is spread. The miller can adjust the amount of cloth spread according to the amount of wind available and power needed. In medieval mills the sailcloth was wound in and out of a ladder type arrangement of sails. Postmedieval mill sails had a lattice framework over which the sailcloth was spread, while in colder climates the cloth was replaced by wooden slats, which were easier to handle in freezing conditions.[21] The jib sail is commonly found in Mediterranean countries, and consists of a simple triangle of cloth wound round a spar. In all cases the mill needs to be stopped to adjust the sails. Inventions in Great Britain in the late 18th and 19th century led to sails that automatically adjust to the wind speed without the need for the miller to intervene, culminating in Patent sails invented by William Cubitt in 1813. In these sails the cloth is replaced by a mechanism of connected shutters. In France, Berton invented a system consisting of longitudinal wooden slats connected by a mechanism that lets the miller open them while the mill is turning. In the 20th century increased knowledge of aerodynamics from the development of the airplane led to further improvements in efficiency by German engineer Bilau and several Dutch millwrights. The majority of windmills have four sails. Multi-sailed mills, with five, six or eight sails, were built in Great Britain (especially in and around the counties of Lincolnshire and Yorkshire), Germany and less commonly elsewhere. Earlier multi-sailed mills are found in Spain, Portugal, Greece, parts of Romania, Bulgaria and Russia [22] A mill with an even number of sails has the advantage of being able to run with a damaged sail and the one opposite removed without resulting in an unbalanced mill.
Machinery
Main article: Mill machinery
Interior view, Pantigo windmill, East Hampton, New York. Historic American Buildings Survey Gears inside a windmill convey power from the rotary motion of the sails to a mechanical device. The sails are carried on the horizontal windshaft. Windshafts can be wholly made of wood, or wood with a cast iron poll end (where the sails are mounted) or entirely of cast iron. The brake wheel is fitted onto the windshaft between the front and rear bearing. It has the brake around the outside of the rim and teeth in the side of the rim which drive the horizontal gearwheel called wallower on the top end of the vertical upright shaft. In grist mills the great spur wheel, lower down the upright shaft, drives one or more stone nuts on the shafts driving each millstone. Post mills sometimes have a head and/or tail wheel driving the stone nuts directly, instead of the spur gear arrangement. Additional gear wheels drive a sack hoist or other machinery. The machinery differs if the windmill is used for other applications than milling grain. A drainage mill uses another set of gear wheels on the bottom end of the upright shaft to drive a scoop wheel or Archimedes' screw. Sawmills use a crankshaft with to provide a reciprocating motion to the saws. Windmills have been used to power many other industrial processes, including papermills, threshing mills, and for example to process oil seeds, wool, paints and stone products [3]
Windshaft, brake wheel and brake blocks in smock mill d'Admiraal in Amsterdam
the world with around 600 operating wind powered industries by the end of the 18th century.[24] Economic fluctuations and the industrial revolution had a much greater impact on these industries than on grain and drainage mills so only very few are left. Construction of mills spread to the Cape Colony in the 17th century. The early tower-mills did not survive the gales of the Cape Peninsula, so that in 1717 the Heeren XVII sent carpenters, masons and materials to construct a durable mill. The mill was completed in 1718 and became known as the Oude Molen and was located between Pinelands Station and the Black River. Long since demolished, its name lives on as that of a Technical school in Pinelands. By 1863 Cape Town could boast eleven mills stretching from Paarden Eiland to Mowbray. [25]
Windpumps
Windpump in South Dakota, USA Main article: Windpump Windpumps are used extensively on farms and ranches in the central plains and South West of the United States and in Southern Africa and Australia. These mills feature a large number of blades so that they turn slowly with considerable torque in low winds and be self regulating in high winds. A tower-top gearbox and crankshaft convert the rotary motion into reciprocating strokes carried downward through a rod to the pump cylinder below. The farm wind pump was invented by Daniel Halladay in 1854.[26][27] Eventually steel blades and steel towers replaced wooden construction, and at their peak in 1930, an estimated 600,000 units were in use.[28] The multi-bladed wind turbine atop a lattice tower made of wood or steel hence became, for many years, a fixture of the landscape throughout rural America. Firms such as Star, Eclipse, Fairbanks-Morse and Aermotor became famed suppliers in North and South America.
Wind turbine
Main article: Wind power A windmill used to generate electricity is commonly called a wind turbine. The first windmills for electricity production were built by the end of the 19th century by Prof James Blyth in Scotland (1887),[29][30] Charles F. Brush in Cleveland, Ohio (18871888)[31][32][33] and Poul la Cour in Denmark (1890s). La Cour's mill from 1896 later became the local powerplant of the village Askov. By 1908 there were 72 wind-driven electric generators in Denmark from 5 kW to 25 kW. By the 1930s windmills were widely used to generate electricity on farms in the United States where distribution systems had not yet been installed, built by companies like Jacobs Wind, Wincharger, Miller Airlite, Universal Aeroelectric, Paris-Dunn, Airline and Winpower and by the Dunlite Corporation for similar locations in Australia.
Rnland Windpark in Denmark Forerunners of modern horizontal-axis utility-scale wind generators were the WIME-3D in service in Balaklava USSR from 1931 until 1942, a 100 kW generator on a 30 m (100 ft) tower, [34] the Smith-Putnam wind turbine built in 1941 on the mountain known as Grandpa's Knob in Castleton, Vermont, USA of 1.25 MW[35] and the NASA wind turbines developed from 1974 through the mid 1980's. The development of these 13 experimental wind turbines pioneered many of the wind turbine design technologies in use today, including: steel tube towers, variable-
speed generators, composite blade materials, partial-span pitch control, as well as aerodynamic, structural, and acoustic engineering design capabilities. The modern wind power industry began in 1979 with the serial production of wind turbines by Danish manufacturers Kuriant, Vestas, Nordtank, and Bonus. These early turbines were small by today's standards, with capacities of 2030 kW each. Since then, they have increased greatly in size, with the Enercon E-126 capable of delivering up to 7 MW, while wind turbine production has expanded to many countries. As the 21st century began, rising concerns over energy security, global warming, and eventual fossil fuel depletion led to an expansion of interest in all available forms of renewable energy. Worldwide there are now many thousands of wind turbines operating, with a total nameplate capacity of 194,400 MW.[36] Europe accounted for 48% of the total in 2009. A wind turbine looking like a windmill is De Nolet in Rotterdam.
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KgOX","","","/search? q\x3dsolar+panels+on+buildings\x26hl\x3den\x26biw\x3d1280\x26bih\x3d619\ x26gbv\x3d2\x26tbm\x3disch\x26tbs\x3dsimg:CAESEgml49dFCNRG9iENx03 JJRsA8A","Similar","solar-skin-studio-formwork-2.jpg","","/search? q\x3dsolar+panels+on+buildings\x26hl\x3den\x26biw\x3d1280\x26bih\x3d619\ x26gbv\x3d2\x26tbm\x3disch\x26tbs\x3dsimg:CAQSEgml49dFCNRG9iENx03 JJRsA8A","More sizes","",[]],"dre7qWcHgAMrGM:":["/imgres? q\x3dsolar+panels+on+buildings\x26hl\x3den\x26biw\x3d1280\x26bih\x3d619\ x26gbv\x3d2\x26tbm\x3disch\x26tbnid\x3ddre7qWcHgAMrGM:\x26imgrefurl\x 3dhttp://blog.miragestudio7.com/manchester-solartower/864/\x26docid\x3dfLLmVTpGCgSrpM\x26w\x3d468\x26h\x3d370\x26ei\ x3dwf1FTrGNHs7MrQf-vOzrAw\x26zoom\x3d1","","","","253","200","It was said that this \x3cb\x3esolar panels\x3c/b\x3e are packed with a punch, a much greener \x3cb\x3e...\x3c/b\x3e","","","468 370","","blog.miragestudio7.com","","","","0" ,[],"",1,"",[],"http://t3.gstatic.com/images? q\x3dtbn:ANd9GcRkBAW9ecVq3aiheDGmFosuogloeUr7d_yUd1Mttq_Ec4mX116","","","/search? q\x3dsolar+panels+on+buildings\x26hl\x3den\x26biw\x3d1280\x26bih\x3d619\ x26gbv\x3d2\x26tbm\x3disch\x26tbs\x3dsimg:CAESEgl2t7upZweAAyF8suZV OkYKBA","Similar","manchester_cis_solar_tower.jpg","","/search? q\x3dsolar+panels+on+buildings\x26hl\x3den\x26biw\x3d1280\x26bih\x3d619\ x26gbv\x3d2\x26tbm\x3disch\x26tbs\x3dsimg:CAQSEgl2t7upZweAAyF8suZV OkYKBA","More sizes","",[]],"XMRVveYXGs_0oM:":["/imgres? q\x3dsolar+panels+on+buildings\x26hl\x3den\x26biw\x3d1280\x26bih\x3d619\ x26gbv\x3d2\x26tbm\x3disch\x26tbnid\x3dXMRVveYXGs_0oM:\x26imgrefurl\ x3dhttp://greensolutionsexpress.com/building-solarpanels\x26docid\x3dPCemE8hUpvH1kM\x26w\x3d534\x26h\x3d377\x26ei\x3 dwf1FTrGNHs7MrQfvOzrAw\x26zoom\x3d1","","","","267","189","\x3cb\x3eBUILDING SOLAR PANELS\x3c/b\x3e","","","534 377","","greensolutionsexpress.com","","","","0 ",[],"",1,"",[],"http://t1.gstatic.com/images?q\x3dtbn:ANd9GcTHSmbE8A5C_ydl9g65vhENgYPVb_Lwied6flamA4YbxMDUrj-","","","/search? q\x3dsolar+panels+on+buildings\x26hl\x3den\x26biw\x3d1280\x26bih\x3d619\ x26gbv\x3d2\x26tbm\x3disch\x26tbs\x3dsimg:CAESEglcxFW95hcazyE8J6YT yFSm8Q","Similar","bipv11.jpg","","/search? q\x3dsolar+panels+on+buildings\x26hl\x3den\x26biw\x3d1280\x26bih\x3d619\
x26gbv\x3d2\x26tbm\x3disch\x26tbs\x3dsimg:CAQSEglcxFW95hcazyE8J6YT yFSm8Q","More sizes","",[]],"izPIwOtNtUQc-M:":["/imgres? q\x3dsolar+panels+on+buildings\x26hl\x3den\x26biw\x3d1280\x26bih\x3d619\ x26gbv\x3d2\x26tbm\x3disch\x26tbnid\x3dizPIwOtNtUQcM:\x26imgrefurl\x3dhttp://greensolutionsexpress.com/building-solarpanels\x26docid\x3dPCemE8hUpvH1kM\x26w\x3d415\x26h\x3d307\x26ei\x3 dwf1FTrGNHs7MrQfvOzrAw\x26zoom\x3d1","","","","261","193","\x3cb\x3eSolar Panels\x3c/b\x3e on house","","","415 307","","greensolutionsexpress.com","","","","0",[],"",1,"", [],"http://t0.gstatic.com/images? q\x3dtbn:ANd9GcSLS01Wfz9wFpJd9jhAWs_snamQLY6zSKjIO0XmqET5VP A_YREp","","","/search? q\x3dsolar+panels+on+buildings\x26hl\x3den\x26biw\x3d1280\x26bih\x3d619\ x26gbv\x3d2\x26tbm\x3disch\x26tbs\x3dsimg:CAESEgmLM8jA6021RCE8J6Y TyFSm8Q","Similar","solar-power-house-21.jpg","","/search? q\x3dsolar+panels+on+buildings\x26hl\x3den\x26biw\x3d1280\x26bih\x3d619\ x26gbv\x3d2\x26tbm\x3disch\x26tbs\x3dsimg:CAQSEgmLM8jA6021RCE8J6 YTyFSm8Q","More sizes","",[]],"KQU0sy18CeA4KM:":["/imgres? q\x3dsolar+panels+on+buildings\x26hl\x3den\x26biw\x3d1280\x26bih\x3d619\ x26gbv\x3d2\x26tbm\x3disch\x26tbnid\x3dKQU0sy18CeA4KM:\x26imgrefurl\x 3dhttp://www.zmescience.com/ecology/renewable-energy-ecology/japansolar-panel23022011/\x26docid\x3dLIJFMZlulY5kUM\x26w\x3d450\x26h\x3d338\x26ei\x 3dwf1FTrGNHs7MrQfvOzrAw\x26zoom\x3d1","","","","259","194","\x3cb\x3e...\x3c/b\x3e \x3cb\x3esolar panels\x3c/b\x3e mandatory for all \x3cb\x3ebuildings\x3c/b\x3e no later than 2030.","","","450 338","","zmescience.com","","","","0",[],"",1,"", [],"http://t0.gstatic.com/images? q\x3dtbn:ANd9GcSArBFhaw7odwQyAUXuouRSTr3v3IqcQfGx65BcIPyJRm8 AEAvuTw","","","/search? q\x3dsolar+panels+on+buildings\x26hl\x3den\x26biw\x3d1280\x26bih\x3d619\ x26gbv\x3d2\x26tbm\x3disch\x26tbs\x3dsimg:CAESEgkpBTSzLXwJ4CEsgkU xmW6Vjg","Similar","solar-panel-japan.jpg","","/search? q\x3dsolar+panels+on+buildings\x26hl\x3den\x26biw\x3d1280\x26bih\x3d619\ x26gbv\x3d2\x26tbm\x3disch\x26tbs\x3dsimg:CAQSEgkpBTSzLXwJ4CEsgkU xmW6Vjg","More sizes","",[]],"V9EjeGPVU6hF1M:":["/imgres?
q\x3dsolar+panels+on+buildings\x26hl\x3den\x26biw\x3d1280\x26bih\x3d619\ x26gbv\x3d2\x26tbm\x3disch\x26tbnid\x3dV9EjeGPVU6hF1M:\x26imgrefurl\x 3dhttp://www.bg-propeties.info/saving-environment-with-utilized-solarpanels/\x26docid\x3dkX5OP0gAWY3PzM\x26w\x3d640\x26h\x3d480\x26ei\x 3dwf1FTrGNHs7MrQf-vOzrAw\x26zoom\x3d1","","","","259","194","Actually, probably the most costly facet of heading \x3cb\x3esolar\x3c/b\x3e \x3cb\x3e...\x3c/b\x3e","","","640 480","","bg-propeties.info","","","","0", [],"",1,"",[],"http://t3.gstatic.com/images? q\x3dtbn:ANd9GcR4_vrXM4tUedJrrK9DNnwWEU6rVKm6B6zB533OgOOKeb KH9qd8Fw","","","/search? q\x3dsolar+panels+on+buildings\x26hl\x3den\x26biw\x3d1280\x26bih\x3d619\ x26gbv\x3d2\x26tbm\x3disch\x26tbs\x3dsimg:CAESEglX0SN4Y9VTqCGRfk4 _1SABZjQ","Similar","traditional-solar-panels.jpg","","/search? q\x3dsolar+panels+on+buildings\x26hl\x3den\x26biw\x3d1280\x26bih\x3d619\ x26gbv\x3d2\x26tbm\x3disch\x26tbs\x3dsimg:CAQSEglX0SN4Y9VTqCGRfk4 _1SABZjQ","More sizes","",[]],"1N1aYx-HZcb1_M:":["/imgres? q\x3dsolar+panels+on+buildings\x26hl\x3den\x26biw\x3d1280\x26bih\x3d619\ x26gbv\x3d2\x26tbm\x3disch\x26tbnid\x3d1N1aYxHZcb1_M:\x26imgrefurl\x3dhttp://www.hsbc.com/1/2/newsroom/news/2008/hs bcs-canary-wharf-hq-invests-in-solarpower\x26docid\x3dfCDPy92phaHq4M\x26w\x3d382\x26h\x3d254\x26ei\x3d wf1FTrGNHs7MrQfvOzrAw\x26zoom\x3d1","","","","275","183","\x3cb\x3e...\x3c/b\x3e \x3cb\x3ebuilding\x3c/b\x3e in Europe to feature \x3cb\x3esolar panels\x3c/b\x3e. Covering 617 square metres \x3cb\x3e...\x3c/b\x3e","","","382 254","","hsbc.com","","","","0",[],"",1,"", [],"http://t2.gstatic.com/images? q\x3dtbn:ANd9GcQB5uKGCFXjpcR1nBkBWDjzad1gku_jBWeKcPNATq5fGBiJs5Z","","","/search? q\x3dsolar+panels+on+buildings\x26hl\x3den\x26biw\x3d1280\x26bih\x3d619\ x26gbv\x3d2\x26tbm\x3disch\x26tbs\x3dsimg:CAESEgnU3VpjH4dlxiF8IM_1L 3amFoQ","Similar","080603_solar_panels_canada_square.jpg","","/search? q\x3dsolar+panels+on+buildings\x26hl\x3den\x26biw\x3d1280\x26bih\x3d619\ x26gbv\x3d2\x26tbm\x3disch\x26tbs\x3dsimg:CAQSEgnU3VpjH4dlxiF8IM_1L 3amFoQ","More sizes","",[]],"iV5fnjPnqfxN2M:":["/imgres? q\x3dsolar+panels+on+buildings\x26hl\x3den\x26biw\x3d1280\x26bih\x3d619\ x26gbv\x3d2\x26tbm\x3disch\x26tbnid\x3diV5fnjPnqfxN2M:\x26imgrefurl\x3dh
ttp://www.impactlab.net/2009/01/18/solar-panels-to-help-light-upbuilding/\x26docid\x3d7CNiosftp9fvuM\x26w\x3d400\x26h\x3d286\x26ei\x3dw f1FTrGNHs7MrQf-vOzrAw\x26zoom\x3d1","","","","266","190","\x3cb\x3eSolar Panels\x3c/b\x3e To Help Light Up \x3cb\x3eBuilding\x3c/b\x3e. The John Molson School of Business, \x3cb\x3e...\x3c/b\x3e","","","400 286","","impactlab.net","","","","0",[],"",1,"", [],"http://t3.gstatic.com/images? q\x3dtbn:ANd9GcTKdXrigI9xdvEbfpw0QSS5LYd0jYpw5UViftVlREaAS_Oanf1 h","","","/search? q\x3dsolar+panels+on+buildings\x26hl\x3den\x26biw\x3d1280\x26bih\x3d619\ x26gbv\x3d2\x26tbm\x3disch\x26tbs\x3dsimg:CAESEgmJXl-eMep_1CHsI2Kix-2n1w","Similar","com-103.gif","","/search? q\x3dsolar+panels+on+buildings\x26hl\x3den\x26biw\x3d1280\x26bih\x3d619\ x26gbv\x3d2\x26tbm\x3disch\x26tbs\x3dsimg:CAQSEgmJXl-eMep_1CHsI2Kix-2n1w","More sizes","",[]],"X6PyMm7LsmpwMM:":["/imgres? q\x3dsolar+panels+on+buildings\x26hl\x3den\x26biw\x3d1280\x26bih\x3d619\ x26gbv\x3d2\x26tbm\x3disch\x26tbnid\x3dX6PyMm7LsmpwMM:\x26imgrefurl\ x3dhttp://oliveventures.com.sg/act/2011/05/25/japan-to-make-rooftop-solarpanels-mandatory-for-all-newbuildings/\x26docid\x3dqomlJO4qMc3RSM\x26w\x3d404\x26h\x3d303\x26ei\ x3dwf1FTrGNHs7MrQf-vOzrAw\x26zoom\x3d1","","","","259","194","Japan to Make Rooftop \x3cb\x3eSolar Panels\x3c/b\x3e Mandatory for ALL New \x3cb\x3eBuildings\x3c/b\x3e","","","404 303","","oliveventures.com.sg","","", "","0",[],"",1,"",[],"http://t2.gstatic.com/images? q\x3dtbn:ANd9GcQv49rJG6ICNqdJDapzIMBTVnx9JSR3Pq1X3dHwGSQkddhEEes","","","/search? q\x3dsolar+panels+on+buildings\x26hl\x3den\x26biw\x3d1280\x26bih\x3d619\ x26gbv\x3d2\x26tbm\x3disch\x26tbs\x3dsimg:CAESEglfo_1IybsuyaiGqiaUk7i oxzQ","Similar","MIT-solar-panel.jpg","","/search? q\x3dsolar+panels+on+buildings\x26hl\x3den\x26biw\x3d1280\x26bih\x3d619\ x26gbv\x3d2\x26tbm\x3disch\x26tbs\x3dsimg:CAQSEglfo_1IybsuyaiGqiaUk7i oxzQ","More sizes","",[]],"rITxkhikgH_EzM:":["/imgres? q\x3dsolar+panels+on+buildings\x26hl\x3den\x26biw\x3d1280\x26bih\x3d619\ x26gbv\x3d2\x26tbm\x3disch\x26tbnid\x3drITxkhikgH_EzM:\x26imgrefurl\x3d http://syntoniccorp.com/news/new-brunswick-to-have-largest-n-j-public-solarproject/\x26docid\x3dAGjHvhpseqfVM\x26w\x3d1500\x26h\x3d1125\x26ei\x3dwf1FTrGNHs7MrQf-
vOzrAw\x26zoom\x3d1","","","","259","194","Starting this month and continuing over the next two years, \x3cb\x3esolar panels\x3c/b\x3e \x3cb\x3e...\x3c/b\x3e","","","1500 1125","","syntoniccorp.com","","","","0", [],"",1,"",[],"http://t1.gstatic.com/images? q\x3dtbn:ANd9GcSs9hEdR1I1cD6AMw8gjyfD32171LgoUerB3wGNnvdMXce0 jMilJg","","","/search? q\x3dsolar+panels+on+buildings\x26hl\x3den\x26biw\x3d1280\x26bih\x3d619\ x26gbv\x3d2\x26tbm\x3disch\x26tbs\x3dsimg:CAESEgmshPGSGKSAfyEAaM e_16Gmx6g","Similar","solar_panels_for_commercial_use3625.jpg","","/search? q\x3dsolar+panels+on+buildings\x26hl\x3den\x26biw\x3d1280\x26bih\x3d619\ x26gbv\x3d2\x26tbm\x3disch\x26tbs\x3dsimg:CAQSEgmshPGSGKSAfyEAa Me_16Gmx6g","More sizes","",[]],"I5iGdic90h9RzM:":["/imgres? q\x3dsolar+panels+on+buildings\x26hl\x3den\x26biw\x3d1280\x26bih\x3d619\ x26gbv\x3d2\x26tbm\x3disch\x26tbnid\x3dI5iGdic90h9RzM:\x26imgrefurl\x3d http://ecofuture.net/energy/the-solarskin/\x26docid\x3dDcdNySUbAPBk5M\x26w\x3d550\x26h\x3d339\x26ei\x3dw f1FTrGNHs7MrQf-vOzrAw\x26zoom\x3d1","","","","286","176","Dress Up your \x3cb\x3eBuilding\x3c/b\x3e with Inflatable \x3cb\x3eSolar Panels\x3c/b\x3e","","","550 339","","ecofuture.net","","","","0",[],"",1,"", [],"http://t2.gstatic.com/images?q\x3dtbn:ANd9GcQ1rFNr1RCmLxT1UIXc4ZNlMnw2NraR4xMyIUgiTLSx_tGdXQB","","","/search? q\x3dsolar+panels+on+buildings\x26hl\x3den\x26biw\x3d1280\x26bih\x3d619\ x26gbv\x3d2\x26tbm\x3disch\x26tbs\x3dsimg:CAESEgkjmIZ2Jz3SHyENx03J JRsA8A","Similar","solar-skin-studio-formwork-1.jpg","","/search? q\x3dsolar+panels+on+buildings\x26hl\x3den\x26biw\x3d1280\x26bih\x3d619\ x26gbv\x3d2\x26tbm\x3disch\x26tbs\x3dsimg:CAQSEgkjmIZ2Jz3SHyENx03J JRsA8A","More sizes","",[]],"t_394LmbJ8PVRM:":["/imgres? q\x3dsolar+panels+on+buildings\x26hl\x3den\x26biw\x3d1280\x26bih\x3d619\ x26gbv\x3d2\x26tbm\x3disch\x26tbnid\x3dt_394LmbJ8PVRM:\x26imgrefurl\x3 dhttp://sandeen.net/wordpress/%253Fp %253D463\x26docid\x3dcGUB5CtthhbdM\x26w\x3d468\x26h\x3d305\x26ei\x3dwf1FTrGNHs7MrQfvOzrAw\x26zoom\x3d1","","","","278","181","That\x26#39;s a lot of \x3cb\x3esolar panels\x3c/b\x3e! Bottom right is a parking lot, shaded by \x3cb\x3esolar\x3c/b\x3e \x3cb\x3e...\x3c/b\x3e","","","468 305","","sandeen.net","","","","0",[],"",1,"",
[],"http://t1.gstatic.com/images? q\x3dtbn:ANd9GcQl7vPhOC4yaPB3MavkUe2ceaKrGwxcjwbyPtb5bRpJZHSq mIGnOA","","","/search? q\x3dsolar+panels+on+buildings\x26hl\x3den\x26biw\x3d1280\x26bih\x3d619\ x26gbv\x3d2\x26tbm\x3disch\x26tbs\x3dsimg:CAESEgm3_1f3guZsnwyFwZQ HkK22GFg","Similar","solar-panels-on-sierra-nevada-brewing-cobuildings.jpg","","/search? q\x3dsolar+panels+on+buildings\x26hl\x3den\x26biw\x3d1280\x26bih\x3d619\ x26gbv\x3d2\x26tbm\x3disch\x26tbs\x3dsimg:CAQSEgm3_1f3guZsnwyFwZQ HkK22GFg","More sizes","",[]]} 1 1023 250
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