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Solar Power On the White House

CartaNova writes "The Obama administration has announced plans to install solar panels and a solar hot water heater on the White House. The Carter administration had previously installed a 32-panel solar system at the White House — which was quietly removed during Reagan's tenure in office. Solar hot water and Photovoltaic firms had been campaigning on this issue for some time."

42 of 405 comments (clear)

  1. How does it get any light? by BadAnalogyGuy · · Score: 5, Funny

    I've seen the White House on Google Maps and Google Earth and there seems to be some kind of thick cloud obscuring the area. Will they generate any electricity with these things or is it just another feel-good liberal gesture with no real world effect?

    1. Re:How does it get any light? by BetterThanCaesar · · Score: 5, Funny

      Maybe Obama should build a wind turbine farm over sco08y's head.

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    2. Re:How does it get any light? by natehoy · · Score: 3, Funny

      No, but we need a superfund team to help clean up the pollution from the burning karma.

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    3. Re:How does it get any light? by Skweetis · · Score: 4, Informative

      I live in the Northeast, and I have powered my house with a solar panel for almost ten years (there is no municipal electrical service where I live). A sunny day isn't required for the panels to work; they work better in full sunlight, but work quite well with cloud cover. Mine will even charge my batteries slowly on a clear night when the moon is full. They actually work better in the winter -- even though the days are shorter, reflected light from snow cover results in greater ambient light and by extension, better charging. Does it snow much in DC?

      My solar panel is 18" x 48", IIRC, and I just have the one. It's an older model, and not as efficient as the new ones, but it meets all of my admittedly modest electrical needs and then some. This will work fine, assuming it's properly engineered.

    4. Re:How does it get any light? by GameboyRMH · · Score: 3, Insightful

      Serious idea: Turn the Washington Monument into a solar thermal collector. The reflecting pool is replaced with a mirror array, the heat exchanger (focus point of the mirrors) goes on top of the monument (it could even look similar...replace the top with an identically-shaped heat exchanger, they could paint it dark gray or maybe even black, but when lit up it would be so bright it would look as white as the rest of the monument). Washington would be proud (his monument directly contributing to US prosperity and security, not like those other deadbeat monuments) and anti-environmentalists will absolutely lose their shit at the news. Win-win!

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    5. Re:How does it get any light? by Shakrai · · Score: 4, Informative

      Does it snow much in DC?

      No. And when it does they shut the whole city down. I'm from Upstate NY -- we don't stop our normal routine for anything short of whiteout blizzard conditions. DC shuts down if they get more than a dusting. That's probably a good thing because none of the morons on the roadways south of the Mason-Dixon line have any clue how to drive in snow.

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  2. solar hot water by bhcompy · · Score: 5, Informative

    I've had solar hot water at my family's home since the early 80s. Looks kind of weird, like giant lasagna pans on the roof, but I'll be damned if they don't work great and keep the gas bill down. Not sure how much it will help in Washington, but worth it in So Cal, especially with the govt kicking in a large tax credit

    1. Re:solar hot water by santax · · Score: 5, Informative

      Once I had a job making swimmingpool-installations. We also had the option of using solarpanels for warming the water. Worked great and the people that bought them had way lower operating costs of the pool. It's an investment at first but it's worth it. In Germany solarpower is huge btw. They have a law there that obligates the powercompanies to actually buy the leftover-green power from the citizens back to the network. Really a country-wide win-win.

    2. Re:solar hot water by clarkkent09 · · Score: 3, Informative

      For your information, solar subsidies in Germany have been a failure http://www.guardian.co.uk/environment/georgemonbiot/2010/mar/11/solar-power-germany-feed-in-tariff $1 billion per month cost to the German taxpayer and still barely produces 1% of total electricity used in Germany while actually causing a net loss of jobs. Same with Denmark, the "world leader in wind power" (thanks to subsidies by Danish taxpayers) with the highest electricity costs in Europe to show for it. I'm all for renewable energy when and if it starts making economic sense, but not if it means blowing taxpayers money on something just because it sounds green.

      --
      Negative moral value of force outweighs the positive value of good intentions.
    3. Re:solar hot water by pixelpusher220 · · Score: 3, Insightful

      or without the BS spin from the anti-environmentalists:

      Environmentalists want the FULL COSTS of fossil fuel use to be included when comparing the prices. What is the cost of releasing all the CO2 into the air? You tax the polluting stuff versus rebating the non-polluting stuff to encourage adoption until the actual costs of the pollution can be incorporated.

      This does mean that renewable energy is never going to cost as cheap as current fossil fuel prices. That much is agreed. What the anti-environment won't tell you is that fossil fuel costs are only going up as supplies and pollutions effects are realized into higher costs.

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  3. Re:lol by The_mad_linguist · · Score: 3, Informative

    Probably because that generation of solar panels sucked, efficiency-wise, and IIRC several models also lost a large percent of their functionality after a few years.

  4. Re:lol by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 3, Funny

    Because Republicans hate the planet!

  5. No payback by DerekLyons · · Score: 4, Funny

    The energy saved by the installation will be more than made up for by the amount of energy expended in proclaiming how green the White House is.

    1. Re:No payback by CrazyJim1 · · Score: 5, Funny

      Actually its not solar power. They're putting Sterling Engines on the roof of the Whitehouse running off the differential of heat between the atmosphere and the hot air rising to the roof.

  6. Re:Why do Americans have problems with solar power by feepness · · Score: 5, Interesting

    Why do Europeans have problems not generalizing about Americans?

    I just signed a contract to get solar power installed, and the sales guy said business was booming. His phone didn't stop buzzing the entire time.

    Also, our President is getting solar power, if you hadn't heard.

  7. Reagan did not remove PV panels AFAIK by rolfwind · · Score: 5, Informative

    He removed solar thermal panels, probably much less efficient than the evacuated tubes used today, when the roof was being repaired in 1986:
    http://query.nytimes.com/gst/fullpage.html?res=9A0DE2DF113BF937A1575BC0A960948260

    They were not reinstalled because of cost effectiveness issue. I also heard maintenance was a pain. They were donated to a university, IIRC.

    Bush also had solar panels installed:
    http://www.nytimes.com/2003/02/27/technology/how-it-works-from-a-white-house-roof-solar-power-proclaims-gains.html

    Many places are spinning this story politically no doubt.

    BTW, I think solar thermal and more insulation is a great, cost effective thing. PV, otoh, not so much yet.

    1. Re:Reagan did not remove PV panels AFAIK by konohitowa · · Score: 3, Insightful

      I suspect it's mostly a reference to the summary, which used coloring words such as "quietly" in regard to Reagan while simultaneously omitting any mention of Bush.

  8. Re:Why do Americans have problems with solar power by phantomfive · · Score: 4, Insightful

    I don't think it's "Americans don't like solar power." Most Americans I know (liberals and conservatives) like solar power. It's cool technology, and getting free energy from the sun sounds like such a good deal.

    If you hear about Americans objecting to solar power, it's probably objecting to the government subsidies for installing solar panels. Conservatives and Libertarians tend to support the idea that we should focus on making the technology cheaper, then people will install it on their own, rather than subsidizing it.

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  9. Re:lol by fremsley471 · · Score: 4, Informative
  10. Re:Why do Americans have problems with solar power by nacturation · · Score: 4, Insightful

    Yes there is a extremely good reason we could care less about solar and especially solar electrical power.

    I could care more.

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  11. Re:Why do Americans have problems with solar power by nacturation · · Score: 3, Interesting

    I am curious, not trying to bust your chops or anything but how can you justify the cost on something that will never pay a return? I cannot see it ever being a good investment at todays prices at least.

    Depending on where you live (ie: depends on how much sun you get and the cost of electricity) as well as what government subsidies for solar installations are offered, it is possible to get a loan for solar equipment today and have the savings on your electric bill completely cover the cost of the loan with savings to spare. So you're not actually spending money out of pocket... it pays for itself and then some.

    The downside to this approach is that in a few years, solar panels will be even cheaper and more efficient and the resulting loan payment will be even less and you'll be stuck saving less than you could have saved had you waited. In other words, do you want a net savings of $30/month starting today for 20 years, or wait 3 years and have a net savings of $50/month for 20 years?

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  12. Re:lol by interkin3tic · · Score: 3, Insightful

    The solar heating panels were installed on the roof of the West Wing, but removed during Ronald Reagans presidency in 1986, after the energy crisis and worries about dependence on foreign oil had subsided.

    So, basically Regan thought the best way to encourage Americans to go nuts with gasoline again was to take the solar panels down? Huh? Why do it "quietly" then? I'm assuming he thought consumers were too dumb to realize that solar panels were not really an alternative to oil.

    Shortsighted for multiple reasons. I mean, surely he didn't think dependence on foreign oil had been solved forever? I guess I shouldn't be surprised, this was Regan after all.

  13. Re:Why do Americans have problems with solar power by jcr · · Score: 4, Insightful

    More like, individuals pursuing their own goals will do a better job of allocating resources than a pack of bureaucrats trying to manage the economy. Your characterization of the free market as some kind of miracle betrays your own ignorance.

    -jcr

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  14. Re:Why do Americans have problems with solar power by clarkkent09 · · Score: 3, Insightful

    I think liberals feel that we should do nothing, and that Government Jesus will come from the sky and solve all problems in one fell swoop. Free Market Jesus has a hell of a lot better track record than Government Jesus when it comes to solving problems, and without sacrificing liberty too.

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    Negative moral value of force outweighs the positive value of good intentions.
  15. Actually G W Bush installed solar by perpenso · · Score: 4, Insightful

    Also, our President is getting solar power, if you hadn't heard.

    Apparently the public often misses it when the President installs solar. G W Bush installed solar. From the fans of W at the Huffington Post:
    "In 2003, solar photovoltaic panels were installed at the White House. Two smaller solar thermal systems were also installed to heat water: one for landscape maintenance personnel, the other for the presidential pool and spa. The Bush Administration itself never really announced the project."
    http://www.huffingtonpost.com/2009/01/27/white-house-solar-panels_n_160575.html

    1. Re:Actually G W Bush installed solar by Trailer+Trash · · Score: 3, Interesting

      G W Bush's house in TX is also one of the most environmentally friendly houses on the planet. Al Gore, on the other hand, lives in a mansion here in Nashville that is 3 times the size of my house but with 10 times the energy usage. He also has another mansion in CA that's comparable in size.

      Sometimes it's what you *do* rather than what you *say* that tells me everything I need to know about you...

  16. Re:Why do Americans have problems with solar power by oiron · · Score: 4, Insightful

    I don't think of it as a miracle, but it appears that some conservatives and libertarians do. Note that I don't make the claim that socialism (or bureaucratism for that matter) is any better. I just don't think that the whole "free market solves all" method is going to work in every case.

    It makes individual sense to do a lot of things that are detrimental to human society, or even local society as a whole. In some cases, it is better to regulate the cost of a particular resource to reflect the actual societal cost of its extraction or use. That's something the "free" market is horrible at.

  17. Re:Why do Americans have problems with solar power by oiron · · Score: 3, Insightful

    Neither "Jesus" seems to have much of a track record individually - it's only when the two work together, complimenting their skills and covering up their weaknesses that things happen. Both extreme socialists (ie communists) and conservatives don't seem to get this.

  18. Re:Why do Americans have problems with solar power by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 3, Insightful

    What are the weaknesses of the free market where the government should step in?

    Sub-prime mortgages? Derivatives-build-from-derivatives ad nauseum? Rings any bell?

  19. solar & wind power by Max_W · · Score: 5, Insightful

    The most effective solar and wind power device is drying clothing outside. It not only saves electricity, but actually cooling down an environment.

    The problem is that it may look unaesthetic, unless a nice looking dryer is invented. Meanwhile drying clothing in the air is forbidden in many districts and even entire cities.

    The effectiveness of drying is 100%. No energy is being lost. And the volume is enormous, - billions of people wash and dry clothing everyday.

    Production of dryers does not involve any toxic material and is not expensive. But if clothing is dried in electrical driers then a lot, a lot of electrical energy is being used.

    I would argue that the problem of global warming would be solved, if drying outdoors would be not forbidden, but promoted. Of course, after an invention of a aesthetic outdoor drier.

  20. Quietly my ass by mbone · · Score: 5, Informative

    "...— which was quietly removed during Reagan's tenure in office"

    I don't know what the OP is talking about. This was done very early on and was publicized widely, as a way of showing how the Reagan administration was forward looking and confident, as opposed to the defeatist Carter administration (or something like that - I could never really grasp Reagan's propaganda). What was done fairly quietly was the complete evisceration and cancelation of the Carter era alternative energy research program, which was just at the stage of showing promise. What was left unsaid was how pleased the oil companies were by all of this.

  21. Re:2012: President Palin removes solar panels by mbone · · Score: 3, Informative

    Don't you feel stupid for posting that blindly partisan crap just a few seconds after this:

    He removed solar thermal panels, probably much less efficient than the evacuated tubes used today, when the roof was being repaired in 1986:
    http://query.nytimes.com/gst/fullpage.html?res=9A0DE2DF113BF937A1575BC0A960948260 [nytimes.com]

    I call BS on that. Those panels were removed to make a point, and a partisan point at that - killing alternative energy was one of Reagan's campaign points in 1980. He mentioned it in his frakking debate with Carter. Reagan described the entire alternative energy R&D program as a waste of money, killed it deader than a doornail, and this was part of that campaign. And, by the way, they were only
    "donated" to a college because an admin at the college campaigned to get them from whatever GSA warehouse they were stuck in.

  22. Re:lol by je+ne+sais+quoi · · Score: 5, Insightful

    Reagan didn't just take the solar panels off the white house, that's symbolic. Reagan also slashed the budget of the National Renewable Energy Laboratory by 90%. This facility currently holds, and regularly held in the past decade or so, the records for the highest efficiency photovoltaics and other types of devices. So if you ask me why solar panels sucked in the past, it was because there was not very much research in solar power going on for the entire decade of the 80s.

    I'm guessing Reagan rationalized these actions as reducing the federal budget. The only problem with that logic is that the guy ran up a bigger deficit in defense projects than Carter (or just about any other president besides Bush, Jr.). But that's typical, when conservative politicians speak about reducing the deficit, that is usually code for cutting programs that they just don't like and has nothing to do with the actual deficit.

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  23. Re:Healthcare. Firefighting. Police. Armies. by BergZ · · Score: 3, Insightful

    Jobs with a livable minimum wage, standardized work week, occupational health and safety rules.
    The free market completely and utterly failed to provide those.

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  24. Re:Why do Americans have problems with solar power by jeff4747 · · Score: 4, Insightful

    Well, one example is the free market will never properly price externalities, such as pollution. Pollution is free - just let it spew out the smokestack, or dump it in the river. This caused widespread problems.

    So the government added a price to pollution.

  25. Re:Why do Americans have problems with solar power by jeff4747 · · Score: 3, Insightful

    Fannie & Freddie and the Federal Reserve own 90% of the mortgages in this country.

    Now. That's how we bailed out the private lenders.

    Fannie and Freddie were legally unable to do subprime mortgages until 2006. What made the mortgage "subprime" was that Fannie and Freddie wouldn't do them.

    Mortgage originators were so "willy-nilly" with their money because they knew they would only hold the mortgage for a couple months. They'd get paid, some schmuck who bought a CDO would lose. The schmuck bought the CDO because the originator paid someplace like Moodys to claim shit was gold.

  26. Re:lol by schwit1 · · Score: 4, Informative

    Reagan cut the budget or was it Congress? Last I read the power of the purse belongs to the Legislative branch.

  27. Yes and no by Frequency+Domain · · Score: 4, Insightful

    The White House submits a preliminary budget proposal, the House and Senate formulate legislation, the two separate versions get reconciled, and then the president signs (or doesn't). Reagan always claimed that the ballooning deficits on his watch were due to Congress, but most of his proposals were unbalanced to begin with and he always signed, claiming he had no choice. Clinton proved Reagan's claims of powerlessness to be hollow in 1995, vetoing the Republican-controlled Congress' proposed budget and thereby shutting down the government for almost a week until Newt Gingrich caved.

    So Congress has sole power to pass the legislation but the White House can play a very significant role if they have the will to do so. It always has seemed ironic to me that Reagan and Reaganites claim the mantle of deficit reduction while the facts are that the ration of Debt / GDP (i.e., what we owe relative to our aggregate income) dropped pretty much continuously from WWII to Reagan and then skyrocketed under all subsequent administrations except Clinton's. Republicans try to claim credit for the Clinton years, ignoring the fact that Clinton stared them down.

  28. Re:lol by Shakrai · · Score: 3, Insightful

    I'd trust Reagan more on cost-effectiveness than Obama, whose answer to every question is "YES".

    That's not quite true. Obama's answer on civil liberties has been "NO!" every single time. FISA, warrantless GPS tracking, an internet kill switch, RKBA, the 1st amendment, blah, blah, blah, blah.

    I always knew I'd disagree with Obama on domestic policy but I actually had hopes for him on civil liberties. Won't make that mistake again.....

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  29. Re:Bright lights and warmth.... by operagost · · Score: 3, Insightful

    Reagan likely took down the panel because it was crappy 1970s technology. You know, the kind that could barely power an LCD calculator when held directly under a 60W lamp. It is highly unlikely that the primitive 1970s amorphous silicon technology-- about 1% efficient-- provided any meaningful amount of power. It's possible they used another technology, but even the best produced at the time was perhaps 6% efficient. Jimmy Carter's sweater was far more sensible. If that's not enough for you, please note that Reagan commended the Coast Guard for converting their buoys to solar power.

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  30. Re:Bright lights and warmth.... by Matt · · Score: 3, Informative

    yeah but it literally took more energy to *take them down* than it took to leave them there.

    Not when they had to take them down anyways for roof repairs anyways.

    I thought I could edit my previous comment after I found this article, but it seems I could only post another one.