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JUNE
2009
Duke Energy invests $50 million
to build 400 mini solar power
plants
Duke Energy will build between
100 and 400 electricity-generating
mini solar power plants throughout
North Carolina over the next
two years in one of the first
large-scale initiatives of its
kind in the United States according
to their CEO, Jim Rogers.
“Solar and wind are both going
to be key parts of our strategy
going forward,” Rogers told
reporters following the company’s
annual meeting.
The North Carolina Utilities
Commission issued a decision
allowing Duke Energy to proceed
with its $50 million proposal
to install solar panels on the
roofs and grounds of homes,
schools, office buildings, shopping
malls, warehouses and industrial
plants, starting later this
year.
Collectively, the solar sites
will generate enough electricity
to power 1,300 homes.
The electricity will flow directly
from the solar sites to the
electrical grid that serves
all customers.
Duke Energy’s solar initiative
will be among the nation’s first
and largest demonstrations of
distributed generation, in which
electricity is produced at numerous
micro generating sites rather
than at a large, centralized,
traditional power plant.
Duke Energy will own and maintain
the solar panels during their
expected 25-year lifespan. The
company also will own the electricity
generated.
It will pay a rental fee to
property owners who host the
panels for use of their roofs
or land, based on the size of
the installation and amount
of electricity generated at
any given site.
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