California
becomes first U.S. state to require solar panels on new...
Sebastien
Malo, Nichola Groom3 Min Read
NEW
YORK/LOS ANGELES (Thomson Reuters Foundation) –
Builders in California will be required to
fit solar panels on most new homes from 2020 under new building standards
adopted on Wednesday, a move that is the first in the United States and could
provide a big boost to the solar industry.
The decision, adopted unanimously by the
five-member California Energy Commission, is part of the state’s effort to
fight global climate change. It came
despite estimates it would raise the up-front cost of a new home by nearly
$10,000 in one of the most expensive parts of the country.
The Commission estimated the standards will
add about $40 to monthly mortgage payments but will compensate for that by
saving residents $80 a month on energy bills.
“We cannot let Californians be in homes that
are essentially the residential equivalent of gas guzzlers,” Commissioner David
Hochschild said ahead of the vote.
The new building codes include updates to
building ventilation and lighting standards. They are collectively expected to reduce the state’s
greenhouse gas emissions by 700,000 metric tons over three years, a level equal
to taking 115,000 cars off the road, according to state officials.
The vote was a major win for the solar
installation industry, which already counts California as its biggest market. Demand for solar equipment in California could
rise by 10 percent to 15 percent because of the new standards, the Energy
Commission forecast in a study earlier this year.
Solar companies cheered the move, saying
they hoped such requirements would one day be adopted in other states, too.
“We think it’s another example of California
policy preceding what will happen in other markets,” Tom Werner, chief
executive of San Jose-based solar company SunPower, said in an interview ahead
of the decision.
California
has one of the most ambitious renewable energy mandates in the country, with a
goal of sourcing half of its electricity needs from renewable sources by 2030.
At the end of 2017, it had reached about 30 percent, according to the CEC.
Because of such policies, the most populous
U.S. state has frequently been at odds with President Donald Trump’s aggressive
rollback of policies to combat climate change. Governor Jerry Brown is planning a global
climate summit this September.
Just 9 percent of single-family detached
homes in the state of 39.5 million people currently have solar panels,
according to a 2017 U.S. Department of Energy report the Energy Commission
cited.
Buildings that are shaded or have a roof
that is too small to accommodate panels will be among those exempt, California
Energy Commission spokeswoman Amber Pasricha Beck said.
My comments:
We have plenty of sunlight in the federation of Malaysia. When is the government going to follow suite so that we can improve the carbon footprint and save the environment. Only a healthy environment can ensure us of healthy people and happy life.
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