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Utility’s proposal threatens California’s rooftop solar mandate

Codes and Standards

Utility’s proposal threatens California’s rooftop solar mandate

Would allow customers to use solar farms instead of installing their own PVs.


By Peter Fabris, Contributing Editor | November 22, 2019

Courtesy Pixabay

A proposal by Sacramento Municipal Utility District could undercut California’s mandate requiring solar panels on almost every new home.

The utility is asking state regulators to allow its customers to get power from solar farms instead of installing their own panels. Home builders have warned that the state’s solar mandate will drive up already high housing costs—adding almost $10,000 to the price.

Solar panel installers counter that allowing builders a way around the mandate would work against California’s clean energy goals. The rooftop solar mandate requires most new homes built starting in 2020 to include solar systems.

Sacramento’s utility serves 1.5 million customers and is the first utility in the state to propose the idea. If regulators approve the proposal, other utilities are expected to follow suit.

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Norshield Products Fortify Critical NYC Infrastructure

New York City has two very large buildings dedicated to answering the 911 calls of its five boroughs. With more than 11 million emergency calls annually, it makes perfect sense. The second of these buildings, the Public Safety Answering Center II (PSAC II) is located on a nine-acre parcel of land in the Bronx. It’s an imposing 450,000 square-foot structure—a 240-foot-wide by 240-foot-tall cube. The gleaming aluminum cube risesthe equivalent of 24 stories from behind a grassy berm, projecting the unlikely impression that it might actually be floating. Like most visually striking structures, the building has drawn as much scorn as it has admiration. 

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