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PV Installations To Soar in Second Half of 2011

Key solar photovoltaic (PV) markets are poised to pick up substantially over the rest of the year, finds a new report from IMS Research.

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With 26,000 subscribers and a global readership in over 170 countries around the world, Renewable Energy World Magazine is targeted at those who make growth happen in renewable industries. Covering policy, technology, finance, markets and more, Renewable Energy World magazine covers all technologies and all markets. Published six times per year, a special Directory of Suppliers Issue is published in July/August which is distributed year round at key renewable energy events worldwide.

3 Reader Comments
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1 of 3
Anonymous
September 23, 2011
Great informative and future-promising report. I have one comment.. actually about the picture attached to this article. It seems a big waste that the owner of that PV module has allowed the nearby tree to grow above the PV and over-shadow it. I hope it's not an environmental rule that hindered the owner from cutting down or trimming the tree :)
Comment
2 of 3
September 23, 2011
It may need to be noted here that IMS Research is only involved with PV solar energy research. And as I responded to John Farrel's article;
I realize the focus is on the electrical facets of energy production, but I want to add that (according to the DOE) about half of our national energy use is for heating purposes. A large portion of that could be layed off onto 'distributed solar thermal' collection in far more efficient ways than to convert solar generated electricity to heat.

That tells me that if solar heating were more widely adopted, much electrical grid expansion would be un-needed, as well as other 'burn-tec' fueling uses. Solar heating energy is also more easily stored (in mass) for off-sun times. Much cheaper than batteries.
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3 of 3
Anonymous
September 25, 2011
Phil writes in comment #2:
"...but I want to add that (according to the DOE) about half of our national energy use is for heating purposes."

This isn't true. Roughly half of RESIDENTIAL energy usage is for heating purposes; the distinction between residential usage and all usage is important. The largest chunk of energy use is for transportation. after that we can break usage into three key sectors: residential, commercial, and industrial. Each of these uses significant amounts of energy for heating but not all use ~50% for that purpose. Also noteworthy is that oil and methane used as industrial feedstocks are counted as energy usage even though they are not burned (e.g. in the manufacture of plastics).
Steven
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