2010.07.19 – Knox County Detention Center solar farm opens

from the News Sentinel, Knoxville TN: http://www.knoxnews.com/news/2010/jul/16/solar-panel-farm-opens/

written by: Nash Armstrong, 865-342-6336.

Knox County took a large step toward becoming more energy efficient Thursday with the opening of a solar panel farm at the Knox County Detention Center.

The farm, which consists of 300 solar panels, five solar storage tanks, 65 concrete pads and more than 6,000 feet of copper piping, is one of the largest solar thermal systems for domestic use in the nation, said Brian Durr, Trane district manager of Tennessee.

“This innovative solution serves as a great example of how government and business can collaborate together to enhance the environment within our community,” Durr said during opening ceremonies at the Detention Center. “The county has stepped forward to provide an excellent example of how government can truly make a significant difference in the community.”

Trane, Knox County and FLS Energy partnered to make the project a reality. The solar thermal technology will replace natural gas as the primary way to heat water for the detention center’s 1,036 inmates.

The $1.88 million project, funded by a U.S. Department of Energy Efficiency and Conservation Block Grant, is estimated to save Knox County $60,000 annually and reduce carbon dioxide emissions by 174 tons annually.

Knox County Mayor Mike Ragsdale said the money saved from using solar energy will benefit the community in the long run.

“We simply cannot afford to keep spending money to heat and cool and light our buildings and facilities,” Ragsdale said. “I’m very proud that we are taking some big steps to save taxpayer dollars.”

Completion of the solar panel farm is the first in a series of government-funded projects in Knox County. The county began a collaboration with Trane in August 2009 to “address aging infrastructure and high energy and operating costs.”

Ragsdale said after all of the various projects’ completions in January 2011 – which consists of renovations and upgrades to 40 facilities, 24 parks and 37 traffic intersections – Knox County will save $6 million annually.

U.S. Department of Energy spokesman Craig Isakow said reducing the country’s use of nonrenewable energy sources also is a way to protect the country.

“A billion dollars a day to buy overseas foreign oil undermines national security because we depend on regimes that don’t necessarily share our values,” Isakow said.

When the projects are completed, Ragsdale said Knox County will be well on its way to becoming free of nonrenewable resources.

“What we’ll have is an infrastructure that reduces our carbon footprint, is efficient, is environmentally friendly and will serve our citizens for years and years to come,” Ragsdale said.

2010.6.21 – Green Marines: Camp Lejeune Buys Into Solar Power

On the Camp Lejeune Marine Corps base in North Carolina, large, reflective rectangles line the rooftops of some of the homes. But they’re not some high-tech military gadget or even a satellite dish to get the latest TV channels: They’re solar panels for heating water.

So many of these panels have gone up in one neighborhood that the community is quickly becoming the largest in the continental U.S. to heat water with solar energy.

‘A Milestone’

An American flag flies from the porch of Sgt. Kirk Paulsen and his wife’s light brown house. The Paulsens live on the corner of a cul-de-sac where every home on the block has a 10-by-4 solar panel smack in the middle of the roof. The solar panel is a new addition to the Paulsen home. One they’re proud of.

“It’s kinda like a milestone in our history books for the Marine Corps, for the state of North Carolina and for the continental U.S.,” Paulsen says. “So I feel very proud of that — that we’re conserving it for our children’s children’s children.” Eventually solar panels will sit on top of 900 homes in this Camp Lejeune neighborhood.

How The Panels Work

Michael Shore, the president of FLS Energy — the company behind the solar panels — says they act like a greenhouse: They heat a fluid that runs down pipes inside the house and transfer the heat into a 40-gallon water tank with temperatures reaching 180 degrees.

Shore says solar hot water is one of the most cost-effective ways to generate energy.

“We have this myth in this country that renewable energy’s expensive,” Shore says. “And here, Camp Lejeune and the house company are saving money through solar [energy], so I think we are really in the midst of a shift in how our nation gets its energy.”

Shore says energy from the sun can heat three-quarters of the water used in a typical household. But Marines living on base don’t pay utility bills. So who’s saving money?

Camp Lejeune, sort of. FLS buys all of the solar panels and equipment and sells the hot water to the company that runs Camp Lejeune’s on-base housing.

FLS has done this before with populations of individuals who don’t have to foot the water bill themselves. It has tacked solar panels on top of hotels, college dorms, prisons — places that use a lot of hot water.

“So the military was the next, and maybe the best, frontier just because there is so much hot water that’s used on a base,” Shore says.

Branching Out

It’ll cost FLS $6 million to hook up all 900 homes on base to solar water heaters. For the average civilian homeowner the out-of-pocket cost can run as much as $7,000. Paulsen and his wife, Jamie, have only had their solar water heater for a few weeks. But they say so far, there have been no surprise cold showers.

“When we’re taking a shower and whatnot, the water is always nice and warm when we want a warm shower on a cold day,” Kirk Paulsen says. “There’s always warm water available.”

After conquering the Marines, FLS Energy has its sights on bringing solar water heaters to families in the other branches of the military.

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

2010.05.20 – Asheville’s FLS Energy pioneers new business model for solar projects

from the Asheville Citizen-Times, by JonathanWalczak

ASHEVILLE — A company based here is helping build the largest solar thermal-powered housing development in the continental United States.

FLS Energy is spending $6 million to install solar technology that will heat water in 900 homes at Camp Lejeune, a large Marine Corps base in Eastern North Carolina.

“The system can generate hot water when the sun is shining, but you can use it whenever you need it,” said Brownie Newman, a director with the company and vice mayor.

The company has pioneered a new business model that may make it easier to finance future renewable energy projects across the country, Newman said.

“We refer to it as a solar-power purchase agreement,” he said.

FLS is fronting most of the project’s initial investment, with the rest of the tab picked up by several partners.

Typically companies hope to make a profit at the front end of a renewable energy project by charging to install equipment. But FLS has a more sustainable, and potentially more profitable, long-term plan, Newman said.

“We will actually own and operate the system over the lifetime of the system,” Newman said.

A 40-square-foot solar panel will be placed on the roof of each home, at a cost of about $7,000. Using complex but readily available technology, the sun’s energy will be used to heat water, which will then be moved to storage tanks.

“It’s like a hose in summertime,” said Joanna Malcolm, an FLS spokeswoman. “The first water that comes out is always warm. It’s using that same idea to heat the water.”

Camp Lejeune has agreed to purchase energy from the system for at least 12 years, with an option to renew the contract after that, Newman said. So the company plans to turn a profit by selling energy to the base rather than charging a premium to install the technology.

“They’re getting the same energy at a price below what they’d pay for fossil fuel-generated electricity from the local company,” Newman said. “This model basically makes renewable energy cost competitive with fossil-fuel sources.”

Company officials will join Gov. Bev Perdue today at Camp Lejeune for a press conference and tour of the project. Construction began last year and is expected to wrap up in December.

“It’s an exciting business model for FLS, and we worked hard to pioneer that business model,” Newman said.

2010.05.13 – Security Federal Bank in Elizabethton is leading the way with progressive solar power

PRESS RELEASE – Elizabethton, TN – FLS Energy of Asheville, NC began installation of a 10.08 kW solar photovoltaic system on Monday at Security Federal Bank’s Main Branch on Elk Avenue, Elizabethton, TN.  This is the first solar energy project in Carter County.  “It’s been a long process,” said Steve Sykes, of Reedy and Sykes – Architecture and Design, Bank board member and architect for the project, “but the outcome is monumental for our community.”

After policy changing deliberations with Elizabethton Electric, City Council and other City Officials, as well as review and approval by the Historic Planning Commission, followed by awaiting a grant award from Tennessee Clean Energy Technology Grant Program, Security Federal Bank’s President and Board are enthusiastic to get the system installed and working.  “We are a progressive group of community leaders,” says Peter Hampton, President of the Bank.  “I’ve been following the alternative energy market for decades.  When Steve Sykes presented the idea of solar energy on our building combined with financials that we couldn’t refuse, we moved on it.  We’re proud to have the first solar PV system in the area.”

The idea for the solar energy system came in 2009 after deciding to replace the roof and incorporate other energy efficient measures at the Main Branch location.  Sykes, whose architecture firm was familiar with integrating solar into their designs, brought the idea to the board, but upfront costs and return on investment were concerns.   Hardy LeGwin of FLS Energy worked closely with Sykes to develop a cost effective PV system.  The grant award, combined with federal incentives and a small revenue stream from TVA brought the payback down to 5 years, from a more typical 10 years for a system of this size.   “The solar age has dawned,” says LeGwin.  “FLS Energy is excited to be a part of an Elizabethton first.”

The rooftop, 42 panel photovoltaic system will be connected to the grid and provide clean energy to TVA’s network, offsetting Security Federal Bank’s energy costs.  Environmental benefits of the system include 9 tons of carbon emissions avoided annually.  Installation of the system will continue through Thursday, and will begin energy production next week.

About Security Federal Bank – Security Federal Bank was chartered in 1963 under the name Security Federal Savings and Loan Association. The Bank is a federally chartered stock savings bank headquartered in Elizabethton, Tennessee. The Bank operates a traditional savings bank business, attracting deposit accounts from the general public and using those deposits, together with other funds, primarily to originate and invest in loans secured by single-family residential real estate.

About FLS Energy – FLS Energy is a leading solar energy company with the mission of establishing solar as a mainstream technology.   FLS Energy provides design, engineering, installation and financing solutions to provide its clients a hedge against rising energy costs and a clean source of energy.  Projects range from one of the largest solar hot water systems in the nation atop a LEED platinum hotel to a four acre solar farm to provide electricity to the grid.

Media Contacts:

Security Federal Bank: Steve Sykes, ssykes@reedyandsykes.com, 423.543.4781

FLS Energy: Joanna Malcolm, Joanna@flsenergy.com, 828.350.3993

2010.04.12 – Courtyard Will Have South Carolina’s Largest Commercial Solar Hot Water System

from GreenLodgingNews.com

GREENVILLE, S.C.—Windsor/Aughtry Company announced an agreement with FLS Energy to provide solar hot water technology for the new Courtyard Marriott hotel at the intersection of Main and Broad Streets in downtown Greenville, S.C. This marks the first Marriott property in the United States to boast a commercial-scale solar hot water system. The plan includes 60 solar panels that have been installed to heat 2,900 gallons of hot water a day for the hotel. The hotel is scheduled to open late this month or early May.

According to Paul C. “Bo” Aughtry, III, principal with Windsor/Aughtry Company, this environmentally sustainable venture represents an investment of a quarter of a million dollars.

“Our intention is to make environmentally friendly choices where possible and when financially feasible,” Aughtry said. “It is our hope that the solar panels will have paid for themselves within five or six years. After payback, the sun will be heating nearly a million gallons of water a year for free. This is a very big investment for us and a significant milestone for Marriott. We hope to be the first of many hotels that will make this environmentally sensitive move.”

Largest System in South Carolina

According to John Clark, director of South Carolina’s Energy Office, Windsor/Aughtry’s latest hotel development in downtown Greenville is the largest commercial domestic solar water heating system in South Carolina.

“The Courtyard Marriott at Main and Broad is setting a new standard for developers,” Clark said. “This project demonstrates that renewable energy can be affordable and reliable while protecting the environment at the same time.”

Frank Marshall, director of sales and marketing with FLS Energy, the company which designed and will install the solar solution, was impressed with Windsor/Aughtry’s commitment to environmental stewardship.

“We are at the dawn of the solar age,” Marshall said. “The folks at Windsor/Aughtry are taking the lead in South Carolina and in the Southeast. Their commitment to solar and a green hotel is creating jobs, reducing pollution, and reducing their energy costs. You can’t beat that!”

Works With Existing Water Heating System

The design for the new Courtyard’s hot water system includes a cutting-edge solar hot water heating system that pre-feeds the hotel’s conventional water heating system.

“The conventional system will make hot water on a rainy day,” Marshall said. “But as long as the sun shines, it’s like money falling from the sky.”

Marshall estimates that Windsor/Aughtry’s investment in a solar hot water solution will save 6132 therms of energy per year. Assuming a therm of energy costs roughly $1.10, that equates to $8,400.00 dollars saved each year. He says that the payback for the system is estimated at six years when taking into account the energy savings, federal tax incentives, accelerated depreciation and potential renewable energy credits. In addition to the solar hot water system, Windsor/Aughtry has installed infrastructure to allow for additional solar energy solutions in the future, if it becomes financially feasible.

“We have designed the building so that we can add photovoltaic panels down the road to generate electricity from the sun,” Aughtry said.

Go to Windsor/Aughtry Company and FLS Energy.

03.31.2010 – FLS Energy helps Guilford go solar

from Mountain Xpress’s: The Biz: Business news around WNC

In what’s being billed as an unparalleled effort, Asheville’s own FLS Energy has announced plans to install 188 solar-hot-water panels atop the dormitories at Guilford College in Greensboro.

The new system, to be installed beginning in April, will provide 9,000 gallons of hot water a day, cutting 113 tons of carbon emissions per year.

FLS Energy is doing similar sustainability projects at UNC-Chapel Hill, Wake Forest University and Mars Hill College. “Guilford is raising the solar bar for all colleges and universities across the nation,” declares Asheville Vice Mayor Brownie Newman, who’s also FLS Energy’s director of finance.

03.30.2010 – North Carolina CCRC Announces Large Solar Thermal Project

from SeniorHousingNews.com

Friends Homes Inc. (Friends), a continuing care retirement community (CCRC) operator in North Carolina, recently announced a partnership with FLS Energy for installation of 208 solar thermal collector panels in its two continuing care retirement communities, Friends Homes at Guilford and Friends Homes West.  As one of the largest ever installed solar thermal systems in a retirement community in the United States, the project will create 10,000 gallons of solar heated water each day for nine of Friends Homes’ buildings and facilities.   The solar thermal facilities will be roof mounted to the selected facilities requiring about 12,480 sq. ft. of roof space and will reduce carbon emissions by almost 150 tons per year and will save approximately $30,000.00 per year in fossil fuel cost. Construction is slated to begin in April with completion projected for September.  FLS Energy is financing the solar thermal project at Friends Homes through its Solar Energy Purchase Agreement.

The solar project, which will be metered, comes with a “performance guarantee” from FLS Energy of the amount of solar energy that will be generated each year. Duke Energy is purchasing renewable energy credits from this solar energy system to meet North Carolina’s renewable energy mandates. FLS Energy will also be responsible for all maintenance of the system. Completion of the solar hot water project in September will establish Friends Homes as one of the most sustainable continuing care retirement communities in the United States.

Wilson Sheldon, CEO, of Friends Homes Inc., said, “It is our belief that we must reduce the consumption of fossil fuels. Installing these solar thermal units in our retirement communities means taking a major step in our commitment to utilizing renewable energy. Not only do we want to be good stewards of the environment, but also, we are looking for ways to contain costs so that our communities remain affordable.”

“This project will establish Friends Home as one of the strongest leaders in North Carolina for developing clean renewable energy for their facilities,” said FLS Energy’s Finance Director, Brownie Newman. “Friends Homes paid nothing upfront and will begin seeing the savings immediately.”

2010.03.16 – Guilford College going solar

from Triad Business Journal: http://triad.bizjournals.com/triad/stories/2010/03/15/daily11.html

Guilford College is installing what it says is the largest solar thermal energy project at any U.S. college to generate 9,000 gallons of hot water per day, according to an announcement.

The school is partnering with FLS Energy to install 188 solar panels on as many as eight buildings, the announcement said. The installation will begin in April and should be complete by August.

The cost of the installation was not announced but it will not be paid up front by the school. Instead, the college will pay a portion of realized annual savings in its energy bills to the Asheville-based FLS, which guarantees a certain level of performance for the system. FLS will also maintain the system after it is installed.

“Guilford is raising the solar bar for all colleges and universities across the nation,” said FLS Energy’s Director of Finance Brownie Newman. “FLS Energy is proud to be a part of the greening of Guilford.”

2010.03.06 – Guilford College plans solar hot water system

from News & Record -  http://www.news-record.com/content/2010/03/16/article/guilford_college_plans_solar_hot_water_system

GREENSBORO — Guilford College said today it will install 188 solar thermal collector panels on up to eight of its buildings to create 9,000 gallons of heated water a day.

According to partner FLS Energy, it is the largest solar thermal energy system project ever installed on a U.S. college or university campus.

The solar thermal energy systems will be installed on Founders Hall and several residence halls, according to a news release. The project follows a 12-panel solar thermal system installation on Shore Hall in 2007.

The solar hot water project is expected to begin in April and be completed by August.

FLS Energy is financing the solar thermal project at Guilford through its Solar Energy Purchase Agreement. The college plans to pay back the installation costs of the project from a portion of the annual savings in energy costs.