2010.06.03 – Sustainability: Evergreen Solar Farm – Western North Carolina’s first solar field makes good use of wasted space

from WNCMagazine.com

http://www.wncmagazine.com/feature/sustainability/evergreen_solar_farm

Written By:Eric Seeger

It’s a sunny spring afternoon, and michael shore is about to take a group of Buncombe County high school students on a tour of the future. Well, at least the energy part of it. They stand in front of roughly three acres of gleaming new solar panels, each flat face soaking in the sun’s energy. The sets of cells measure about the same square footage as two parking spaces, and they quietly churn out electrons while producing no smoke, gasses, or waste material. In fact, the only hint that they’re working is the low hum of a nearby transformer as it collects and sends the panels’ electricity to the power grid.

The Asheville company Shore cofounded, FLS Energy, completed the facility just a few months ago. But what makes this project special isn’t just that it’s the first utility-scale solar field in Western North Carolina, but that it also represents a new way to give closed landfills a second life.

Two years ago, after partnering with SAS Institute to build the first large solar field in the Southeast at the software company’s headquarters in Cary, FLS set its sights on bringing a field to the mountains. “Our experience with the SAS project led us to believe that we could do this ourselves, closer to home,” says Shore, who served as a scientist for the Environmental Defense Fund before becoming the company’s CEO.
He, along with a team that included the company’s original partners, started working on the idea of placing their panels on a capped landfill. They approached Progress Energy, which has been working to develop new renewable energy sources across North Carolina, and talked to Evergreen Packaging paper plant in Canton, which maintains a landfill for the waste it generates. A plan began to come together.
“We thought this would be a great use of that property,” says Mike Cohen, a spokesman for Evergreen Packaging. “Our attitude was that if there was a way to produce clean energy from that landfill, we wanted to work it out.”

The packaging company gave FLS a 20-year lease on its land for $1 per year. The arrangement makes sense, because the landfill cannot be used for development or agriculture for many years.

“Evergreen was very generous and open,” says Shore about the land use. “We were able to create a proposal for Progress Energy to purchase electricity from us.”
But soon after the utility company agreed to the deal, FLS’s engineers quickly understood that the project would be tricky. What looks like a grassy hill is actually untold tons of waste that are still settling; the hill is slowly compacting and shifting. And this problem was compounded by the fact that the landfill’s contents are sealed under a combination of a protective membrane and soil that can’t be penetrated.
“Normally, you just dig into the ground and create your support for the panels,” says FLS President Dell Freudenberger. “But at Evergreen, there’s no mobility. We can’t even go in the ground an inch on that landfill. So we had to plan everything to lay on top of the ground.”

After conducting geotechnical surveys to learn how many pounds per square inch could be applied to the soil, the company’s designers created a concrete base that was heavy enough to support the panels in strong winds, yet wide enough to keep them from sinking into the ground. And since the hill is still moving, all the connections are designed to flex and shift.
Because of these creative design solutions, Evergreen Solar Farm is one of the first large-scale photovoltaic systems to occupy landfill space in this country.

In all, the project took about two years from inception to completion, but the building phase lasted less than six months.

Now Freudenberger checks his e-mail to track the solar farm’s harvest. Each morning, he receives a chart from Progress Energy that shows a detailed timeline of the previous day’s electrical output. A sunny day will generate a chart that follows a perfect parabolic curve: low output in the morning, climbing high in the middle of the day, and dipping back down at dusk. Periods of cloudiness present themselves as jagged drops in productivity.

Given ideal conditions, the $5 million farm can produce about 550 kilowatts.

According to Progress Energy, that’s enough energy to power more than 50 homes. The facility has the transformer capacity to handle twice that output, and Shore and Freudenberger agree that as soon as the utility company is interested in buying more solar power from FLS, they will install additional panels at the site.

This technology isn’t going to replace energy from coal and nuclear power in the short term, Freudenberger admits. “But there’s a significant portion that we can put on the grid,” he says. “Even if we can get 10 percent of the grid power from these smaller, dispersed systems—we’re at less than one percent right now—that’s a lot of capacity we have yet to fill.”

Already, there is growing interest from towns and counties across the country that are examining how their landfills can generate power and income. And this project proves there is room on the grid—and on the ground—for low-maintenance, quick-to-build, sources of clean energy. As more projects take root, WNC will know the future just happened to start in Canton.
FLS Energy also specializes in installing residential and commercial solar hot-water heating systems. To learn more, visit
www.flsenergy.com

2010.04.18 – Time for Asheville to lead in clean energy development

from the Asheville Citizen-Times

Asheville has never been afraid of being a leader when it comes to supporting clean energy.

A decade ago, it was citizens and political leaders from Asheville and Western North Carolina who championed the passage of the North Carolina Clean Smokestacks Act, which committed our state to achieving the strongest clean air standards in the nation. Many of the large utility power plants across North Carolina, including the Progress Energy plant in Asheville, have reduced their emissions that cause haze and smog by 90 percent as a result of the technology improvements required by the Act.

Old adversaries decided to work together and innovate. As a result, our mountain air is cleaner today.

Asheville has also taken a leadership role in promoting clean energy at the community level. In 2006, the City Council adopted a policy committing the city to reduce its carbon pollution by 80% by the year 2050. By retrofitting our buildings to make them more efficient and modernizing our operations, we have exceeded our annual energy conservation goals and saved taxpayers tens of thousands of dollars by reducing our utility expenses.

The need to free our country from polluting fossil fuels and foreign oil is, I believe, the most important challenge facing our generation. The status quo of our energy policies are draining our economy, weakening our national security and wrecking our environment.

Each year, we transfer billions of dollars from our economy to foreign governments, many of whom are no friend of the United States.

Just across the state lines in Tennessee and Virginia, the same beautiful Appalachian Mountains that we love so much here in Asheville are laid to waste on a vast scale as mountain-top removal strip mining is carried out to extract the coal that is burned in North Carolina power plants to generate our electricity.

The overwhelming body of scientific research tells us that we must reduce our emissions of global warming pollutants by 80% or more in order to avoid severe and irreversible impacts on our children’s generation and the generations that will follow them.

I believe that the people of Asheville want our community to be a national leader in developing clean, renewable energy. To that end, on Jan. 12, the Asheville City Council unanimously voted to support a proposal called the Asheville Energy Independence Initiative. Buncombe County is also considering the concept.

The idea is to create a simple and user-friendly process for business owners and home owners in the community to make energy efficiency and renewable energy investments for their property. It involves an innovative financing approach known as the PACE model which removes the number one barrier that deters investments in clean energy technologies– the upfront capital cost.

Communities around the country that have pioneered the PACE model have seen a significant increase in clean energy development. Some are projecting significant job creation benefits as a result.

In order to create a larger public dialogue about this innovative concept, the Blue Ridge Sustainability Institute, Asheville City Council and Buncombe County Commissioners are sponsoring a Town Hall Meeting 5:30- 7 p.m. Monday at the Public Works Building on Charlotte Street. The forum will feature Jeff Hughes, the Director of the UNC Environmental Finance Center, which has taken a lead role in researching the viability of the PACE model for cities in North Carolina.

If the Asheville Energy Independence Initiative sounds interesting to you, come out to the Town Hall Meeting to learn more and share your perspective about whether such an initiative makes sense for our community.

Brownie Newman is the Asheville vice-mayor and a member of Asheville City Council.

2010.03.05 – Suniva Announces Commissioning of Evergreen Solar Farm in North Carolina

from AZOCleanTech.com: http://www.azocleantech.com/Details.asp?newsID=8977

Suniva, a leading solar cell and module manufacturer in the U.S., announced the commissioning of 555-kW Evergreen Solar Farm in North Carolina, with its partner FLS Energy. This project was constructed on a site that was formerly a landfill. The solar facility uses Suniva’s high-powered solar modules and was built through a 20-year power purchase contract from FLS Energy to provide renewable energy to Progress Energy’s customers in the region.

A local ceremony was held on March 1, 2010, when the project went live. The ceremony was attended by Congressman Health Shuler and after a press conference toured the facility. President of FLS Energy, Michael Shore, said that by using Suniva’s high-quality products enabled the company to provide cost-effective, highly-efficient solutions to its customers. Shore further said the modules in the facility are performing well demonstrating an outstanding combination of high-quality manufacturing and high-efficiency solar technology.

CEO of Suniva, John Baumstark, said the Evergreen Solar Farm project is a good example of the company’s importance in the fast-growing southeastern U.S renewable energy market. It also demonstrates the company’s capability to meet the increasing needs of its utility-scale customers, Baumstark said.

Source: www.suniva.com

2010.03.05 – Western North Carolina’s Largest Solar Array Is Now Online

from ElectricNet.com: http://www.electricnet.com/article.mvc/Western-North-Carolinas-Largest-Solar-Array-0001

Asheville, NC – Progress Energy Carolinas’ generation mix in Western N.C. is a little sunnier, as the region’s largest solar photovoltaic (PV) array is now online and generating electricity. The new 555-kilowatt (kW) Evergreen Solar Farm is owned and operated by FLS Energy and built on Evergreen Packaging’s now-closed landfill in Haywood County. Progress Energy Carolinas is purchasing the array’s entire output for distribution to the company’s customers.

“The solar age has dawned,” said FLS Energy’s Chief Executive Officer Michael Shore. “FLS Energy converted an old landfill to an electricity generation facility, creating jobs and clean energy along the way.”

This solar PV array project created five new jobs and is expected to generate approximately 730,000 kilowatt-hours every year. This is roughly equivalent to the annual electricity demand from 51 average North Carolina homes. This will reduce carbon dioxide emissions by approximately 525 tons per year, which is the equivalent of removing 100 vehicles from the roads in Western North Carolina.

“Sustainability and economic development can go hand-in-hand to provide solutions to climate change and the financial crisis,” said Congressman Heath Shuler (D-Waynesville). “I am proud to welcome the area’s first solar farm, and look forward to the impact it will have on creating jobs and sustaining our planet. This project, along with Asheville’s National Climactic Data Center, and dozens of growing clean energy businesses across the region, position Western North Carolina to become the national hub for green energy and green jobs.”

This is the Progress Energy’s fourth large-scale solar PV array to begin operating in North Carolina. Another four are under contract. Including small-scale projects, Progress Energy has contracts for a total of more than 11,000 kilowatts of solar power.

“We believe that solar power, along with energy efficiency and state-of-the-art power plants, will play an important part of a balanced approach to meeting the challenges of growing energy demand and global climate change,” said John Smith, vice president of Progress Energy Carolinas’ Western Region. “We are proud to partner with FLS Energy and the community on this innovative project and excited to see it come online.”

The Evergreen Solar Farm has a unique design that makes it one of the first solar arrays in the country to be installed on a landfill. FLS Energy constructed concrete pads on top of the landfill to provide a base for the 2,340 Sunniva solar panels, because the installation could not penetrate the two-foot soil cap. The pads provide counterweight against high winds and support on the ground.

“This is yet one more way our company can show our commitment to the environment,” said Derric Brown, Evergreen’s Director of Sustainability. “This is a great use of our closed landfill and we are happy to participate. Combined with our support of sustainable forests in the region for wood chips and our participation in expanding recycling for our products like milk cartons we hope to be a leader in smart environmental practices.”

FLS Energy proposed this solar PV project in response to Progress Energy Carolinas’ 2007 request for renewable energy proposals, which is part of the company’s plan to meet the requirements of North Carolina’s Renewable Energy and Efficiency Portfolio Standard. The law requires utilities to provide a portion of their energy sales using renewable energy sources and energy efficiency.

SOURCE: Progress Energy

2010.03.04 – Solar PV Projects Generate New Value for Property That Once Was Trashed

from sunpluggers.com: http://sunpluggers.com/states/north-carolina/2010/03/solar-projects-generate-new-value-for-property-that-was-trashed-000113.php

The nation’s closed landfills are continuing a trend of remarkable transformations into solar power plants.

In recent weeks, solar installations at landfills have been announced or have started generating electricity in Texas, Georgia, Arizona and Massachusetts. “Brownfields,” former industrial sites that may contain contaminants, also are being converted to produce solar power in several states.

Now, in North Carolina, a 555-kilowatt array, called the Evergreen Solar Farm, has gone online at the former landfill of Evergreen Packaging, a century-old paper-products company.

“The solar age has dawned,” said Michael Shore, chief executive of FLS Energy, which owns and operates the solar array. “FLS Energy converted an old landfill to an electricity generation facility, creating jobs and clean energy along the way,” he added, according to a news release.

The utility Progress Energy Carolinas is buying the solar plant’s generated electricity for distribution to its customers. The project includes a 20-year power-purchase agreement, which is similar to a lease. These agreements often do not require any up-front cost. They are commonly used by businesses and governments to obtain solar electricity and are available to homeowners in a limited number of leading solar states, with more on the way.

At the end of 2008, the state of North Carolina had a total of less than 5 megawatts of grid-tied solar-electric generating capacity. Progress Energy alone now has 11 solar megawatts in production or under contract in the state, including eight large-scale arrays and a number of small projects.

“We believe that solar power, along with energy efficiency and state-of-the-art power plants, will play an important part of a balanced approach to meeting the challenges of growing energy demand and global climate change,” said John Smith, vice president of the western region of Progress Energy Carolinas, in the news release.

The 2,340 solar modules, from Georgia-based Suniva Inc., are mounted atop concrete pads that do not penetrate the landfill’s 2-foot-deep soil cap. The concrete provides a counterweight to high winds.

Suniva produces monocrystalline silicon solar cells and modules, the type with the highest efficiency. With solar photovoltaics, higher efficiency means that more power can be generated in less space.

“The modules are performing extremely well, demonstrating a powerful combination of high-efficiency solar technology and high-quality U.S. manufacturing,” said Mr. Shore of FLS Energy.

U.S. Rep. Heath Shuler, D-N.C., spoke at a ceremony to mark the completion of the solar project.

“Sustainability and economic development can go hand-in-hand to provide solutions to climate change and the financial crisis,” he said. “I am proud to welcome the area’s first solar farm, and look forward to the impact it will have on creating jobs and sustaining our planet.”

2010.03.04 – FLS Energy Solar Farm Goes Live with High-Performance Solar Modules from Suniva

from BusinessWire: http://www.businesswire.com/portal/site/home/permalink/?ndmViewId=news_view&newsId=20100304005565&newsLang=en

Evergreen Solar Farm in North Carolina Powered by SunivaTechnology

NORCROSS, Ga.–(BUSINESS WIRE)–Suniva, Inc., a U.S. manufacturer of high-efficiency monocrystalline silicon solar cells and modules, today announced the commissioning of the Evergreen Solar Farm in Canton, North Carolina, with partner FLS Energy. Set atop a former landfill, the 555 kW project utilizes high-powered Suniva solar modules and was constructed via a 20-year power purchase agreement from FLS Energy to supply clean energy to the region’s Progress Energy customers. The installation went live at a local ceremony on March 1st in which Congressman Health Shuler spoke at the press conference and toured the Evergreen Solar Farm.

“Utilizing Suniva’s technology allows FLS to retain our commitment to provide only the most efficient, cost-effective products and offer the best value for our customers,” said Michael Shore, President of FLS Energy. “The modules are performing extremely well, demonstrating a powerful combination of high-efficiency solar technology and high-quality U.S. manufacturing.”

“The Evergreen Solar Farm provides a shining example of Suniva’s prominence in the rapidly expanding renewable energy market of the southeastern U.S. and our ability to meet the growing needs of utility scale customers,” said John Baumstark, CEO of Suniva.

About Suniva

Based in Norcross, GA, Suniva® manufactures high-efficiency monocrystalline silicon solar cells and high power solar modules with low-cost techniques in order to make solar-generated electricity cost-competitive with fossil fuels. Suniva leverages exclusive licenses to critical patents and patent-pending intellectual property developed by founder and CTO, Dr. Ajeet Rohatgi, at the Georgia Institute of Technology’s University Center of Excellence for Photovoltaic Research, which is funded by the Department of Energy. Led by an internationally regarded team of business executives and photovoltaic scientists, Suniva sells its advanced solar cells and modules Powered by Suniva™ worldwide, renewing U.S. leadership in the new energy economy. For additional information, please visit www.suniva.com.

2010.1.03 – Utilities start soaking up sun

from: CharlotteObserver.com

By Bruce Henderson
bhenderson@charlotteobserver.com

For the first time, Duke Energy will be making a small part of its electricity this year from the sun, using its solar rooftops program

Thousands of panels are soaking up the winter sunshine as Duke Energy launches its solar rooftops program under North Carolina’s new green energy law.  For the first time, in a small but significant step, Duke and Raleigh-based Progress Energy will have to make a smidgen of their electricity this year from the sun.  Energy from other renewable fuels, such as wind, wood wastes and chicken manure, will join the mix in two years. Renewables have to account for 12.5 percent of utility retail sales by 2021.

Renewable-energy mandates like North Carolina’s, the first in the Southeast and one of 29 nationwide, won’t save consumers money. Duke will add 16 cents a month to residential customers’ bills to cover its costs.  Advocates say their value is in prodding utilities and smaller operators to invest in power that pollutes less than the coal that fuels much of the state, leaves no radioactive waste and taps free energy.

Large-scale solar is making its debut across the Piedmont.  Duke’s panels are going up atop a Childress Klein Properties industrial building in Charlotte, National Gypsum’s wallboard plant in Mount Holly, a Food Lion distribution center in Salisbury and an industrial building in Greensboro. All will be online by April.

Duke will announce more commercial, industrial and residential rooftop sites as the year unfolds. The $50 million program will make 8 megawatts of solar power, enough to supply about 1,300 homes.

Construction is also under way on one of the nation’s biggest solar farms, a land-based installation in Davidson County, 50 miles northeast of Charlotte.  Its owner, Maryland-based SunEdison, will sell Duke the 16-megawatt output. The first phase went online Christmas week. SunEdison is also under contract with Progress Energy for a smaller solar farm in Wilmington.

Large-scale solar power hasn’t previously gotten traction in the Carolinas, despite abundant sunshine, because it’s expensive to produce and operates only about 20 percent of the time.  Solar produced less than 1 percent of the nation’s electricity this year and has grown little since the 1990s, the Energy Information Administration says. Wind power, by contrast, produced about 2 percent of U.S. energy but has nearly doubled since 2007.

Duke probably would not be heavily investing in N.C. solar without the green energy mandate, said renewable energy chief Owen Smith. But the company is warming to the technology.  “Solar is probably the piece of the renewables requirements that we feel like we have the best handle on,” Smith said. “We’ve received (more than 65) solar proposals from various developers, and costs over the last 12 months have declined.”

Companies that generate solar power also are growing innovative, he added, in how they site projects and take advantages of tax credits and stimulus money.

Duke can reap federal tax credits for 30 percent of its investment. North Carolina awards tax credits worth 35 percent of the investment and excuses property taxes on 80 percent of the property’s value.

Steve Kalland, director of the N.C. Solar Center, said the marketing clout and public profile of the nation’s third-largest utility will give solar power new credibility.  “There’s also the concept that a rising tide lifts all ships,” he said of the effect on smaller solar companies.

Duke expects to have no problem hitting this year’s solar-power target of about 9 megawatts.   In addition to its rooftops program and SunEdison agreement, Duke will buy credits – proxies for solar power – from two Asheville-area firms, FLS Energy and Vanir Energy. It also plans to buy solar credits out of the state.

Power tools whirred last week as workers labored under a cold, gray sky to install 2,314 solar panels on a Childress Klein Properties building on Reames Road.   As it did with the three other sites announced so far, Duke leases the rooftop and owns the solar array. Its 532 kilowatts won’t power the building, instead connecting directly to the electrical grid.   Childress Klein, a real estate company, hasn’t invested directly in solar power because it would take years to recoup the money. But the firm proposed three buildings for Duke’s rooftops program to help avoid the need to build more power plants.  “We just decided it would be a good way to get our toe in the water,” said Chris Daly, a partner in the company’s industrial division.

The sites were picked because of their ready access to the grid and potential for making solar power. Apart from modest leasing fees, the companies who agreed to host the solar arrays say they will benefit from solar power’s green aura.

Food Lion, which prides itself on energy efficiency, volunteered as a low-cost way to explore energy alternatives. Among them is whether the supermarket chain could expand use of solar power in its 1,300 stores.

National Gypsum’s 400,000-square-foot plant makes recycled-content wallboard from gypsum, a byproduct of pollution controls at Duke’s power plants. The solar panels on the roof, said spokeswoman Nancy Spurlock, “just add to the fact that it is a green process.”

2009.12.29 – Review of the Top 10 Stories of 2009; #7: Going Green

excerpt from: The Mountaineer, Written by Kim Gardner

For Haywood County, 2009 was a green year.

The year started with the county commissioners approving the county’s first sustainability plan. The plan, available online at the county’s Web site, outlines ways Haywood County can be a sustainable community. ….

In Canton, the county’s first solar farm was constructed. FLS Energy, based in [Asheville], began constructing its 3-acre solar field in Canton in September. It is located at an old landfill no longer in use by Evergreen Packaging.

Constructed in phases, the field will ultimately produce 550 kilowatts to sell to Progress Energy, said Michael Shore, president of FLS Energy.

“The project has been a great success,” Shore said in mid-December. “It is being developed in six phases. Phases 1 to 3 are already delivering electricity to the grid. Phase 4 and 5 should be online before the end of the year.”

The $5 million project does not just provide clean energy. It has created jobs and infused money into local economies, Shore said in September. The steel is made in Western North Carolina, and the panels are made in the Southeast United States.

“We are very committed to buying locally and at least in the U.S.,” Shore said in September.

The project has created 45 jobs in the area, and Shore said the company is still hiring. ….

2009.12.11 – For Norcross-based company, solar energy production is hot

Solar-cell maker Suniva recently finished the first stage of a possible half-billion dollar deal with an Indian energy company. 

The Norcross-based company is helping a North Carolina firm build a “solar farm” outside Asheville. It also plans to construct a $250 million manufacturing plant in Michigan. But the real payoff for the still young, high-tech start-up may come from Washington.

President Obama promises $150 billion in alternative-energy spending – money for solar, wind, ethanol and other renewable energies — over the next decade. “We’ve seen a good deal of progress in the last 11 months or so, but more can be done,” Bryan Ashley, chief marketing officer for Suniva, said Thursday. “Still, things are heating up quite a bit.”

Obama travels to Copenhagen next week for the United Nations climate change summit where calls to reduce greenhouse gas emissions from coal-fired power plants, automobiles and other sources could lead to a greater emphasis on renewable energy – and profits for Suniva. The solar power industry notched 16 percent growth last year, according to the Solar Energy Industries Association, a Washington-based nonprofit. Jobs created by photovoltaic solar cell manufacturers, like Suniva, jumped 81 percent from the previous year.  Ashley said Suniva will increase its Georgia workforce next year by 50 percent. Today it employs 130 people at its clean, un-factory-like factory in Norcross. While the company hopes to keep production stateside, overseas markets – 90 percent of Suniva’s sales — promise the best bang for the buck.

Last month Suniva completed the first part of what it hopes will be a long and lucrative $480 million deal with India’s Titan Energy Systems. Ashley said the deal “is not completely finalized yet,” but he’s optimistic. Suniva’s solar cells power a one megawatt power plant in West Bengal. Suniva has already embarked upon a similarly sized deal in Germany. France and Spain are proven markets. And China, which is positioning itself as the solar-industry leader, is another Suniva client. “This is truly a global business,” said Monique Hanis, the trade association’s spokeswoman. “We’re seeing a lot of companies like Suniva making inroads exporting their U.S.-made products. There’s huge potential in China, India and other developing countries.” The United States, though, remains a solar energy laggard, Georgia in particular. “We’ve got a chance with residential and commercial rooftop solar systems alone to generate 20 percent of Georgia’s future energy needs,” Ashley said. “And we’ve got plenty of sun. But there are people here in Georgia who continue to mislead the public that solar doesn’t work here.”

2009.12.06 – U.S. must become leader in clean energy

from Greensboro News-Record

BY MARIA KINGERY AND MICHAEL SHORE

When asked once why he was so good, legendary hockey player Wayne Gretzky replied, “I skate to where the puck is going to be, not where it has been.”

In the future, our world will be powered by clean-energy sources. We will be reminded of this when world leaders meet this week in Copenhagen to discuss a global pact for reducing global warming pollution. The question is, will the United States urgently strive to become a leader in the largest industrial transformation of this century, or will we continue to fall behind Asia and Europe and accept the economic consequences of delay?

In North Carolina and the rest of the United States, we must forge ahead or be permanently left behind. We must skate to where the puck is going to be.

A recent analysis concludes that strong federal climate and energy policy would create up to 65,000 jobs in North Carolina over the next 10 years and grow the state economy by $4.1 billion. The transition to new, job-creating energy industries powers much of this growth. In fact, the report found that the stronger the legislation, the greater the economic reward here in North Carolina.

FLS Energy is a solar energy-generation company headquartered in Asheville, with an office in Greensboro. The company has grown from three employees in 2006 to 42 employees today. And we are poised to double our payroll of good-paying jobs over the next year. Energy legislation that provides incentives for clean-energy resources and caps carbon emissions will drive the innovation that is the key to making businesses like ours successful.

Unlike fossil fuels, renewable energy is infinite. As a result, energy prices will be less subject to short-term, dramatic fluctuations. Research also indicates that the costs of constructing and running renewable energy plants will decrease as these technologies become more widespread. And once such a facility is built, it runs on a renewable, sometimes free, source of energy.

Strong legislation will also promote energy efficiency, which helps consumers reduce energy use while maintaining their lifestyle and saving money. The money not wasted on energy puts billions of dollars back into the largest driver of our economy — consumer spending. Put differently, money saved by not consuming energy can instead be spent on goods and services in North Carolina.

Beyond the economic risks of remaining dependent on fossil fuels, there are also national security implications. Recently, a blue-ribbon panel of three- and four-star retired U.S. admirals and generals issued a report that found America’s current energy posture constitutes a serious and urgent threat to national security — militarily, diplomatically and economically. They insist that the converging risks of all fossil fuels — not just foreign oil — require moving to clean-energy sources.

Strong energy and climate legislation will create jobs, break the cycle of oil dependence and repower America with clean, homegrown energy. We appreciate Sen. Kay Hagan’s strong support for a clean-energy economy. We now need her to work with Senate leaders to strengthen this critical legislation and put it on the president’s desk as soon as possible. Let’s skate to where the puck will be.

Maria Kingery is co-founder of Southern Energy Management. Co-author Michael Shore is president of FLS Energy.