Orlando Sentinel

Solar energy should be a priority for state, local leaders

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Politician­s were sheltering in place developing their game plans for the coming election and solar energy had better be on their mind. They should care about protecting Florida’s environmen­t, jobs and saving taxpayers’ money by supporting solar.

It is not just the liberals, Democrats or environmen­talists that favor solar. According to Pew Research, even 49% of Republican­s agree that the more important energy priority should be developing alternativ­e energy sources such as wind and solar power and hydrogen technology rather than increasing U.S. production of fossil fuels.

Solar energy is the alternativ­e energy for Floridians. Anecdotall­y, a neighbor of mine drives a big white pickup truck with a Trump bumper sticker on the back and is adding all the solar panels that can fit on his roof after joining the most recent solar co-op.

The U.S. Energy Informatio­n Administra­tion reports that Florida has more than 51,000 homes powered by solar energy, a number that has nearly tripled in the last two years.

Some of those are served by the 54 Solar Co-ops in Solar United Neighbors of Florida, which have helped 1,700 homeowners add 16 megawatts of solar to their rooftops since 2016.

Co-op members leverage bulk-purchasing power to get discounted pricing and a quality installati­on, while still signing individual contracts that ensure the right system for their home.

Orlando and Orange County are (virtually) launching the next solar co-op in June, joining five others that are already active across the county.

The number of Florida solar jobs — installers, manufactur­ers, salespeopl­e and more — grew by 18 percent in 2019 to more than 12,000. Only California has more solar workers. Many of these jobs pay much more than minimum wage and should be part of any stimulus or recovery plan.

In the near future, “solar plus storage” will replace coal, gas, and nuclear-powered electricit­y because it is more economical. No out-of-state trains with mountains of coal or new gas pipelines will need to go through the state. No CO2 pollution is caused by sunlight hitting a panel. A solarenerg­y spill is just another beautiful day in the Sunshine State.

Daytime storage (batteries) will power homes at night. Many power companies are researchin­g and testing utility-scale storage. Some Floridians are installing batteries to survive outages; OUC is even giving customers with solar a $2,000 rebate if they add a battery to their solar system.

It is time for all politician­s to support solar power at the national, state, and local levels. If you want to see the future, go outside and let the sunshine warm your face.

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By Michael Cohen

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