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October 14, 2009
Sun
Valley, CA, USA: P4P Energy Completes Demo Suspended Solar System
The
first, cable-suspended free span solar energy system was completed
last week over the REM Eyewear headquarters parking lot. The patented,
cable-supported photovoltaic system created by P4P Energy is expected
to generate 40,877 kilowatt-hours of renewable electricity per
year, enough to power five to six single family homes and to prevent
1.5 million pounds of carbon from being released into the atmosphere.
The
revolutionary, uniquely aesthetic solar system is designed to
utilize otherwise untapped air-space, in other future applications
such as over aqueducts, irregular terrain, agricultural and brown
fields, parking lots, and pedestrian malls and walk ways.
“Being
on the cutting edge is part of our DNA,” said Mike Hundert, chief
executive officer of REM Eyewear, “whether it is the design of
our eyewear, or the manner in which we do business. Our investment
in this remarkable solar system at our headquarters is consistent
with our philosophy that companies that do well also have an obligation
to do good.”
The
state-of-the-art P4P Energy TenSol-brand suspension system differs
from conventional solar installations by eliminating the need
for excessive use of columns and foundations that traditionally
support photovoltaic panel arrays. Instead, hundreds of panels
can lie atop low-cost cables that span as much as 200 feet across.
SunEdison
was a project advisor, oversaw the entire electrical install,
and analyzed the construction and wiring process to achieve efficiencies
in the future. Ecolectrics USA provided the Suntech 270 watt panels.
“Also
appealing are the multiple-use capabilities of TenSol designs,”
said Steven Conger, P4P Energy’s founder and chief executive officer.
“Our streamlined systems can be built over parking lots and agricultural
fields provide shade and shelter, while converting the airspace
into an energy company. Over aqueducts, the system has the extra
benefit of significantly reducing evaporation – saving as much
as eight million gallons of water per year, per mile of aqueduct.”
Conger
added, “P4P Energy systems are designed in such a way to fluidly
integrate community solar systems with the urban landscape. By
easing the processes of design, construction, location choice
and environmental impact, we believe we can effectively transform
the economic viability of solar energy. Last but not least, this
system doesn’t just look revolutionary; it is revolutionary.”
Further details about: P4P
Energy
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