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Groveland subdivision uses solar energy to power homes

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Groveland subdivision uses solar energy to power homes

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New homes are constructed in the Trilogy subdivision in Groveland on Tuesday.

Groveland resident Donna Naples remembers going to the New York World’s Fair in 1964 and hearing about the future and the possibility of many cool things to come.

After all, the fair’s theme was “Peace through Understanding,” with a focus on “Man’s Achievement on a Shrinking Globe.” An online description said, “The fair is best remembered as a showcase of mid-20th century American culture and technology.”

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Donna Naples points out the arrow on her electric meter. When it points right, the home’s solar system is producing more energy than is being used in the house, and the balance is feeding the grid. Naples is banking kilowatts

Naples, then 10 years old, heard about the possibility of wireless phones and solar energy and was awed by the prospects. To her, those things seemed impossible.

Little did she know that, almost 50 years later, she’d not only own a cell phone but she’d actually be living in a solar-powered home.

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While the older homes at Trilogy did not come with solar systems, all of the newer homes do.

“When you’re 10 years old, you don’t think about it like that. You don’t think of the reality, but it’s amazing, and now 50 years later, here I am and me and my husband are living in a home just like that,” Naples said. “Never in my lifetime did I ever think I’d be a part of that.”

Naples, now almost 60, lives at Trilogy, an age-restricted, gated community off U.S. Highway 27 in Groveland. Homes start at $172,000 for villas and go up to nearly $400,000.

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Solar installations such as this one are a common sight at Trilogy in Groveland.

Her home, along with every home at Trilogy built after January 2013 — when Shea Homes took over for Levitt as the community’s builder, is powered by solar energy.

She and her husband enjoy receiving electric bills that, on most months, are $10.48 or less.

Everett said the cost is for surge protectors and not really electric.

“We have no electric bill here and I know that especially in summer months, electric bills can be $200-$300. Never have we had a bill more than $10.80, even in the summer, as hot as it is here, and running the A/C sufficiently,” Naples said.

Katie Everett, sales manager for Shea Homes Marketing Company, said the very thought of not having to pay a high electric bill every month is what keeps people buying at Trilogy.

“It’s newer technology that came out in February 2013, but as a consumer going out and buying solar for their home on their own, it’s very expensive. You’re looking at anywhere from about $30,000 or $40,000 to $50,000,” Everett said.

“Shea Homes solved the financial model. You have to save a lot of energy to consider spending $40,000.”

Everett said when a customer buys a home, Shea pays for the 20-year lease price of a solar system, about $20,000 to $25,000, to SolarCity, its trade partner. Buyers then get to choose from three models: three-, four- or five-kilowatt systems that vary the amount of electric used or money paid for it.

An upgrade to what Shea refers to as a “SheaXero system, means a “No Electric Bill Home,” and ends up offsetting electricity costs all year.

SolarCity maintains the system for its life, about 30 years.

“It costs the consumer nothing up front,” she said. “This is a 55-plus community, and you figure one of the biggest concerns for an empty nester is, ‘How can I have the least amount of expenditures?’

“No electric bill is a big one when you consider that in 10 years, electric rates have gone up 400 percent. Just research that.”

And if you look at the nearly 500 homes already built out of the approximate 1,500 total after Shea’s build-out capacity at Trilogy, it’s easy to spot the features that contribute to its solar energy status — solar panels.

“Each home has a patch of solar panels on the roof and after a while, you don’t even notice it anymore,” Naples said.

The homes take in solar energy during the day, transfer it to a grid to store it so there is power throughout the night.

“You’re connected to the grid. You’re like a little mini power plant,” she said.

And though most days in Florida are sunny, the system still works during gloomy or rainier days because the ultraviolet light that the sun gives off is still powerful enough.

The main thing that sells buyers, Everett said, is that they end up saving about $2,000 to $5,000 per year in electric costs.

Everett also said that as more and more consumers get solar and spread the word about it, it’s going to become the norm.

“We figure that if we start providing solar to consumers, other consumers are going to start demanding it,” Everett said.

Naples said she sometimes reflects on what she and her husband will do in 20 years when the Shea Homes lease on their system is up.

“In 20 years, they’ll probably approach us and ask if we want the newest system and we’ll decide then, but right now, it’s there. And coming from South Florida, where electric was very expensive, I can’t imagine not having it,” Naples said.




i'm so happy that florida is getting serious about alternate energy...

some might have this fallacy belief that alternate energy isn't sufficient to have but solar panel energy is the future but big companies like to tell people that the more damaging popular energy is the only way to go, well, screw you and your damaging ways... :hello:
 
Don't get me wrong I like this idea and even considered putting it on my home last year but from everything I read the solar panels become less efficient every year with the current manufacturing process. So I think before I give out thousands of dollars for a system I will wait a bit longer for the technology to improve.
 
This makes sense....you have a state w/lots of solar energy potential...why not use it? :| :|
 
Good for use in Florida but not where I am. We get more dank and dark days than sunny days. Then, how would this even work with tons of snow on your roof? :shrug:
 
Jazzy said:
Good for use in Florida but not where I am. We get more dank and dark days than sunny days. Then, how would this even work with tons of snow on your roof? :shrug:

It wouldn't.
 
When solar panels do better then 15 to 20 percent in collecting power then it will be a much better idea for northern states.

This one is claiming it will have 41%.

Breakthrough: World's most efficient solar panel
http://www.zdnet.com/article/breakthrough-worlds-most-efficient-solar-panel/


This subdivision is going to notice in a few short years they are not getting the same savings they did when it was new.

Solar Panel Degradation
Author
By Jack Dini January 31, 2014
Comments| Print friendly | Subscribe | Email Us |

Everyone has heard the pitch for solar energy, install solar cells on your roof and get free electricity from the sun. Sure they cost a lot up front, but they will last 25-30 years—which just happens to be about the payback time given current electricity rates from coal, nuclear and natural gas. So when the solar panels start failing in two or three years the economics of solar power collapses like a house of cards. That is exactly what is happening around the world. Cheap Chinese solar panels have flooded the market and are now starting to fail at an alarming rate. Solar panels covering a warehouse roof in Los Angeles were only two years into their expected 25-year life span when they began to fail. Worldwide, solar power adopters are reporting similar problems and the $77 billion solar industry is facing a quality crisis reports Doug Hoffman. (1)

In May 2013 The New York Times exposed this growing scandal at the heart of the solar power industry. No one is sure how pervasive the problem is since there are no industry wide figures about defective solar panels. And when the defects are discovered, confidentiality agreements often keep the manufacturer’s identity secret, making accountability in the industry all the more difficult. (2)
http://canadafreepress.com/index.php/article/60865
 

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