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Posts Tagged ‘Solar Business Resources’
California Expands Solar Thermal Incentives for Low-Income Housing
Wednesday, April 11th, 2012 by Solar Fred
 Photo: Flickr/Ken Lund
Once again, California is leading the way for solar hot water with a new solar thermal incentive, this time for low-income single-family properties and multi-family dwellings.
Regular readers to the Free Hot Water blog are probably familiar with California’s CSI Thermal rebate program that was introduced 2010. It’s perhaps the most generous solar water heating rebate program in the United States, offering up to $500,000 for commercial properties and up to $1,875 for individual homeowners.
Now, California’s Public Utility Commission (PUC) has introduced another incentive that targets low-income housing and individuals. Called “The CSI-Thermal Low-Income Program”, the goal is pretty self-explanatory.
In terms of numbers, the low-income program provides customers of Pacific Gas and Electric Company (PG&E), San Diego Gas & Electric (SDG&E), and Southern California Gas Company (SoCalGas) with up to $3,750 in rebates—double the regular rebate.
For multi-family dwellings, such as apartment buildings, nursing homes, and assisted living homes, owners can receive up to $500,000. The top figure differs from the regular program in that owners will receive a 50% higher rebate for the natural gas displaced by the solar system.
Therefore, while the maximum amount is the same, a 10 collector solar thermal system under the low-income CSI thermal program is going to receive up to $19.23 per Therm displaced, whereas the same 10 collectors will receive up to $12.82 per Therm displaced in the regular CSI Thermal program.
Those are the highest rates. As the program grows and more installations come on line, the rebate amount will decrease for both programs, and, in theory, so will the price of installing solar water heating systems. (You can keep track for the current CSI Thermal rebate level here.)
Of course, there are substantial requirements for properties to qualify under the CSI Thermal low-income program. You can download a summary of the eligibility requirements here.
On top of the new rebate, owners of low-income rental properties—whether single family rentals or mult-family—are also eligible for the Federal government’s 30% investment tax credit (ITC).
While the application process may be complicated, solar thermal systems are not. To help simplify the installation process even more, Free Hot Water has created multiple pre-engineered solar thermal systems for both homes and multi-family systems that that will meet all of California’s CSI thermal equipment standards.
Combined, these Federal and state financial incentives should help to inspire more solar hot water installations in California, which still lags behind PV. In fact, the traditional CSI Thermal program began in the fall of 2010, and the program still hasn’t burned through its top rebate step. So, there’s still plenty of work to do to get the solar hot water word out.
Confused? Questions? Always feel free to contact us at info@freehotwater.com. We’ll help as best we can.
Tags: California solar hot water incentives, CSI Thermal Program, CSI Thermal program for low income, Solar Business Resources, solar hot water for nursing homes, solar hot water incentives Posted in 30% Investment Tax Credit, CSI Thermal Program, CSI Thermal program for low-income, Residential Solar Hot Water, Solar Hot Water for Apartment Buildings, Solar Rebates, Solar Tax Incentives, Solar Thermal & Solar Hot Water News | No Comments »
Eneref Institute Launches Phase Two of Promoting Solar Hot Water to the Press
Wednesday, March 21st, 2012 by Solar Fred
We’ve written about Eneref Institute’s solar hot water advocacy and information initiatives before. Recently, the organization announced that it is moving into the second phase of its “Solar Thermal Advantage” initiative, which is designed to promote the benefits of solar water heating and solar cooling to the trade media.
The initiative will specifically focus on promoting solar thermal heating and cooling case studies. Free Hot Water launched a similar company initiative last month for our installer partners, so we’re clearly on the same page and support Eneref’s efforts.
The bottom line is that successful solar hot water projects are out there, but they aren’t seen or written about. The more the media, public, and policy makers learn about the advantages of solar water heating, the more customers and policy makers will see its value and support it.
In its press release, Eneref’s Managing Director, Seth Warren Rose, explained that many news editors he speaks to about solar thermal are unfamiliar with both the technology and the brands. He said, “We’re working on educating the media about the various brands and about the tremendous benefits of solar heating technology, so that in time, the press will reach out for these stories without our help.”
Another part of the second phase involves a new website devoted to solar thermal projects. Eneref has just launched www.shc.eneref.org, which features successful case studies demonstrating the benefits of using the sun’s energy for heating and cooling applications. A promotional effort for the website is supposed to begin in the second quarter of 2012.
Solar heating installers and manufacturers are invited to submit their case studies online, at www.casestudy.eneref.org. Free Hot Water plans to contribute, and we hope that our customers will contribute their Free Hot Water projects there, as well.
In addition to Eneref’s efforts, if you’d like to publicize your installations through Free Hot Water, please send the same materials to solarfred@freehotwater.com. We’ll also do our best to spread the word on our blog, email, and potentially RenewableEnergyWorld.com, as well.
Once again, the more we celebrate and promote the value of solar hot water in the United States, the more we will grow our businesses, while contributing to clean air, clean water, and to our nation’s energy independence. Please join our collective solar thermal efforts.
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Tags: Solar Business Resources, solar hot water marketing, solar hot water resources, solar thermal news Posted in Solar Business Resources, Solar Hot Water, Solar Hot Water Marketing, Solar Hot Water News, solar hot water resources, Solar Thermal Space Heating | No Comments »
Free Hot Water Website Goes International—with Automatic Translation Services
Saturday, February 11th, 2012 by Solar Fred
As of right now, you can be reading this blog post and all information on Free Hot Water’s website in just about any language.
No, we don’t have a separate website for every language in the world. Instead, Free Hot Water has installed Google Translate. Now, whether your native language is Spanish, Chinese, Italian, German, or many other languages, you can read Free Hot Water blog posts, product descriptions, and learn about solar thermal design and engineering services with a quick click of a button.
To enable Google Translate for this page or any page on our website site, simply click on the “Select Language” tab in the upper left hand corner of the page.

Choose your language of choice, and no matter where you navigate on Free Hot Water or shop.freehotwater.com, the page will automatically translate the text, although it won’t translate the text that may be embedded into images, such as the screenshot of our website above.
Google Translate isn’t perfect, but it does give you a good idea of what’s on the page. If you need to check the original English version, all you need to do is click on the paragraph in question, and you’ll see a pop-up of the source material.
And by the way, Free Hot Water does ship internationally to Latin America, Asian countries, and other regions, so if you’re looking for a huge selection of solar thermal and solar water heating products…. Willkommen, bienvenue, bienvenida, and 欢迎.
Tags: New Solar Products, Solar Business Resources, solar marketing, Solar Thermal Training Posted in Google Translate, solar hot water resources, Solar Thermal & Solar Hot Water News, Solar Trade Shows | No Comments »
1603 Treasury Grant Program may be ending, but it’s not too late!
Thursday, November 17th, 2011 by Solar Fred
Dear Free Hot Water Dealers and Distributors and blog readers,
It’s not too late! That is, it’s not too late to close commercial contracts that can qualify for the 1603 Treasury Grant Program (TGP) that is set to expire at the end of 2011, just 6 weeks away. A 5% safe harbor provision or starting on the install with a signed contract before the end of 2011 allows customers to be eligible.
In an effort to facilitate more solar thermal installations before the TGP ends, we’ve discounted a range of pre-engineered, pre-packaged OG-100 commercial solar thermal systems that can qualify for the TGP for commercial applications.
Plus, in addition to the pre-engineered solar thermal packages, we’re also providing our dealers purchasing the pre-engineered systems with simplified DIY TGP instructions, a TGP checklist, and a Sample TGP Application.
Paul Burrowes, our COO, explained, “At this point, it looks like the 1603 Treasury Grant Program is ending, but solar thermal installers may not realize that they still have time beyond December 31st, 2011, to install commercial systems. Under the TGP rules, there is a 5% safe harbor provision. Under certain conditions, an apartment building owner, for example, can purchase 5% or more of the equipment from the installer before the end of 2011 and qualify for the TGP. Under these conditions, the balance of the installation and equipment can be accomplished after 2011.”
Since 2009, the TGP has provided commercial entities a 30% cash grant towards to costs of solar projects in lieu of the 30% ITC. All solar technologies qualify, including solar water heating and other commercial solar thermal applications.
For example, pre-engineered systems are ideal for hotels, multi-family residents, nursing homes, hospitals, restaurants, laundry facilities, and many other commercial and industrial applications.
Installers who can sign contracts for these applications and purchase at least 5% of the equipment will enable their clients to take advantage of the 30% cash grants available under TGP.
The 5% Safe Harbor
Under the 5% safe harbor, if the applicant (the solar hot water purchaser or developer) pays or incurs 5% or more of the total cost of the specified energy property before the end of 2011, the applicant is eligible for the TGP. Alternatively, costs paid or incurred by a person providing property to the applicant, such as the solar hot water installer, can also be included under the 5% safe harbor provision.
In addition, Free Hot Water’s pre-engineered solar hot water systems can help qualify applicants through showing that “physical work of a significant nature” has begun by the end of 2011. Under this provision:
- “Physical work of a significant nature” can include any physical work at the site where the solar hot water system is going to be installed.
- It may also includes physical work that has taken place under a binding written contract for the manufacture, construction, or production of the solar thermal system by the applicant’s facility, provided the contract is entered into prior to the work taking place.
Other key points to keep in mind:
- The person applying for the TGP must be a for-profit business and not a federal, state or local government, or non-profit business.
- A project performance report is required on an annual basis for a period of 5 years after the property was placed in service.
- Regardless of eligibility method, all applications must be submitted to the Treasury Department before the statutory deadline of October 1, 2012.
For more information on the 1603Â TGP program, here’s a link to the Treasury Dept web site.
Burrowes said, “We sincerely hope the TGP gets extended. It has helped us and many of our dealers grow our business and create American solar jobs. By providing our discounts on pre-engineered solar thermal systems as the program possibly sunsets, we’re hoping to enable our Free Hot Water solar thermal installers to close contracts under the 5% safe harbor or begin construction before the end of 2011.”
You can see all of our line of pre-engineered commercial 0G-100 kits on our online catalog. Free Hot Water’s TGP forms and sample applications are available to all Free Hot Water dealers. Contact us for more information.
Tags: 1603 Treasury Grant Program, Solar Business Resources, solar hot water for apartments, solar hot water incentives, Solar Thermal incentives Posted in 30% Investment Tax Credit, Solar 1603 Treasurty Grant Program (TGP), Solar Business Resources, Solar Hot Water, Solar Hot Water for Apartment Buildings, Solar Hot Water News, Solar Rebates, Solar Tax Incentives | No Comments »
New SEIA Poll: Nearly 75% Americans Say Solar Hot Water Good for Jobs and Growth
Sunday, October 23rd, 2011 by Solar Fred

Good news. Despite solar hot water getting less attention in the U.S., a new poll released by the Solar Energy Industry Association (SEIA) shows strong public support for solar water heating and agree that solar water heating helps the economy and create jobs.
The independent poll conducted by Gotham Research Group shows that 74% of Americans agree with the statement, “The growth of the solar water heating industry will produce jobs and help the American economy.”
Breaking down the support by region, 80% of Northeastern residents, 78% of Midwestern residents, 69% of Southern residents, and 73% of Western residents agree with the above statement.
It’s ironic that the South, which has abundant sun hours and heat, agreed less with the statement than those in the North East. The solution is more solar customer education, advocacy, and marketing throughout the U.S., but especially in the South.
The survey also revealed that the public has generally positive perceptions of solar water heating systems, with 48% having a positive response and 4% having a negative. The remaining 52% didn’t have enough information to have an opinion one way or the another.
Once again, this 52% figure indicates that the solar water heating industry must increase customer education and marketing if the industry is to grow as fast as solar PV.
Another indication of the education gap is the finding that 63% of respondents believe solar energy can be used to heat water, heat buildings, cool buildings, heat swimming pools, and produce electricity. It’s wonderful that there’s a majority that knows about solar thermal applications, but if this were a school exam, it would be a failing grade. We need to strive to get those figures to at least a “C” (75%) by the same time next year. The more customers are aware of solar benefits and economics, the more sales will increase for these applications.
As for support for overall solar subsidies, including solar PV, 29% of respondents agreed that the type of energy most deserving of U.S. government support was solar. In second place, 20% chose wind, and 18% chose natural gas. Oil came in at 16% and nuclear came in with only 8%. Finally, coal scraped the bottom of the subsidy opinion barrel with 5%.
While solar is at the top of this broad heap, once again, we need to increase that support through showing customers and policy makers how solar is now more cost effective than ever. Eventually, solar subsidies will have to go away, but for now, subsidies for fossil fuels need to be reduced or eliminated to level the playing field.
What about customer decision dynamics? Survey respondents said that they would either be “extremely likely” (6%), “very likely” (9%), or “somewhat likely” (31%) to consider installing a solar water heating system in their own home. That’s less than half of respondents who might consider solar hot water.
The reason? As usual, it comes down to cost. “The cost of purchasing the system” (72%) and “the cost of maintaining the system” (56%) are the top two concerns for residents in all regions and across key demographic/partisan groups.
In conclusion, there’s a majority of support for solar hot water in the U.S., but as an industry, we must do more to build awareness for solar hot water benefits for homes and large-scale commercial applications, such as laundry facilities, hotels, hospitals, nursing homes, apartment buildings, and restaurants.
The survey was conducted by phone from June 23rd through 26th, 2011 among a representative sample of 1,013 adults, 18+ living in private households in the continental United States. A detailed press release is available here.
Tags: California Solar Iniaitive, Solar Business Resources, Solar Hot Water News, solar marketing, Solar Rebates, solar water heating, solar water heating for apartment buildings Posted in Hotel Solar Hot Water, Residential Solar Hot Water, Restaurant Solar Hot Water, Solar Hot Water, Solar Hot Water for Apartment Buildings, Solar Tax Incentives, Solar Thermal & Solar Hot Water News | No Comments »
RIP Steve Jobs and 3 Lessons for the Solar Hot Water Business
Wednesday, October 5th, 2011 by Solar Fred
 R.I.P. Steve Jobs
When Steve Jobs resigned as CEO of Apple, I wrote a blog post on RenewableEnergyWorld.com about lessons that the solar PV industry could learn from him. Now, as the news streams in about his death, I’d like to add my thoughts about what the solar thermal industry can learn from Apple and Steve Jobs.
Steve Jobs/Solar Thermal Lesson #1: It’s okay to be #2, so long as you’re working hard to be the best at what YOU do. Even with all of Apple’s success today, the world is still dominated by PC based computers. Similarly, the solar thermal industry gets less attention from the press and policy makers. Being the #2 computer platform didn’t stop Steve Jobs from innovating and finding an extremely loyal following for Apple products. In the same way, solar thermal installers must continue to develop our own customer base that can most benefit from solar hot water and solar thermal applications.
Consequently, we must aggressively engage with apartment building owners, hotels, hospitals, colleges, and all multi-residential facilities, educating them about solar hot water’s benefits. With centralized heating systems and limited roof space, solar thermal is clearly worthy of the owner’s attention, and like Jobs, we must continue to send the message that solar thermal works and that it is cost effective for these applications (and more) —even without subsidies.
Steve Jobs/Solar Thermal Lesson #2: Rely less on policy and more on creating the market. While the CSI Thermal program here in California is in full swing, according to the latest research from SEIA, solar thermal growth in California is still pretty flat. I can’t think of any way that Jobs and Apple were markedly affected by a government policy, except perhaps NAFTA. But Free Trade benefits everyone. So, when it comes down to it, the Apple team and Jobs became successful without policy makers and incentives. They charged premium prices to customers, who gladly stood on a line for hours, sometimes days.
In the same way, solar thermal—and PV—must strive to provide solar thermal products and services that cost effectively serve its commercial and residential customers without depending on subsidies. In fact, Free Hot Water did just that recently, reducing prices on our new OG300 systems to make solar thermal more affordable for residential customers. Do subsidies help? Of course they do, but solar thermal is and will remain cost effective today, especially for large commercial installations listed above.
Steve/Solar Thermal Lesson #3: Believe in what you do and persevere. Steve Jobs has a great deal of success, but he also had a great deal of failure, being ousted from Apple in 1985. But he kept going, creating another computer company, NeXT… which also failed. And yet, Jobs didn’t stop innovating. He founded invested in Pixar and eventually returned to Apple to save it from bankruptcy. He didn’t do it for the money, but because he wanted to challenge the status quo. He didn’t believe that everyone should settle for a boring, complicated PC computer –or smart phone or slate computer.
Similarly, like Apple, solar thermal technology is very different from gas, propane, and electric water heating. Those energy sources currently may be the default water heating energies in America, but that’s not the case in other countries. Europe, Israel, and China are filled with solar water heaters and very common. Why? Because they lack the gas and coal that’s so abundant and cheap in the U.S, and so free solar energy is more valuable and prized.
Despite American market challenges, as an industry, we must continue to show people that there is another source of thermal heating power and that it is available throughout the world, today and for the foreseeable future–especially as fossil fuel prices rise.
Those are our thoughts on lessons we can learn from Steve Jobs’ life and work. If you have more thoughts related to the solar thermal industry, pleas share them in the comments.
Finally, we’d like to leave you with some inspiring quotes from Steve Jobs. At Free Hot Water, we celebrate his life and his worldwide inspiration to think differently. We hope you do too.
Living Life
“Remembering that I’ll be dead soon is the most important tool I’ve ever encountered to help me make the big choices in life. Because almost everything – all external expectations, all pride, all fear of embarrassment or failure – these things just fall away in the face of death, leaving only what is truly important. Remembering that you are going to die is the best way I know to avoid the trap of thinking you have something to lose. You are already naked. There is no reason not to follow your heart.”
– Stanford commencement speech 2005
Working Hard
“I don’t think I’ve ever worked so hard on something, but working on Macintosh was the neatest experience of my life. Almost everyone who worked on it will say that. None of us wanted to release it at the end. It was as though we knew that once it was out of our hands, it wouldn’t be ours any more. “When we finally presented it at the shareholders’ meeting, everyone in the auditorium stood up and gave it a 5-minute ovation. What was incredible to me was that I could see the Mac team in the first few rows. It was as though none of us could believe that we’d actually finished it. Everyone started crying.”
– Playboy magazine 1985
Doing the Work for Customers
“There’s nothing that makes my day more than getting an e-mail from some random person in the universe who just bought an iPad over in the UK and tells me the story about how it’s the coolest product they’ve ever brought home in their lives. That’s what keeps me going. It’s what kept me 5 years ago [when he was diagnosed with pancreatic cancer], it’s what kept me going 10 years ago when the doors were almost closed [on Apple]. And it’s what will keep me going 5 years from now whatever happens.”
- AllThingsD Conference, 2010
Doing the Work for Yourself
“We think the Mac will sell zillions, but we didn’t build the Mac for anybody else. We built it for ourselves. We were the group of people who were going to judge whether it was great or not. We weren’t going to go out and do market research. We just wanted to build the best thing we could build. When you’re a carpenter making a beautiful chest of drawers, you’re not going to use a piece of plywood on the back, even though it faces the wall and nobody will ever see it. You’ll know it’s there, so you’re going to use a beautiful piece of wood on the back. For you to sleep well at night, the aesthetic, the quality, has to be carried all the way through.”
– Playboy magazine 1985
Simplicity
“That’s been one of my mantras — focus and simplicity. Simple can be harder than complex: You have to work hard to get your thinking clean to make it simple. But it’s worth it in the end because once you get there, you can move mountains.”
– Business Week 1998
Innovation
“Innovation comes from people meeting up in the hallways or calling each other at 10.30 at night with a new idea, or because they realized something that shoots holes in how we’ve been thinking about a problem. It’s ad hoc meetings of six people called by someone who thinks he has figured out the coolest new thing ever and who wants to know what other people think of his idea. And it comes from saying no to 1,000 things to make sure we don’t get on the wrong track or try to do too much. We’re always thinking about new markets we could enter, but it’s only by saying no that you can concentrate on the things that are really important.”
– Business Week 2004
Instinct
“You can’t connect the dots looking forward; you can only connect them looking backwards. So you have to trust that the dots will somehow connect in your future. You have to trust in something – your gut, destiny, life, karma, whatever. This approach has never let me down, and it has made all the difference in my life.”
– Stanford commencement speech 2005
Doing what you love
“Your work is going to fill a large part of your life, and the only way to be truly satisfied is to do what you believe is great work. And the only way to do great work is to love what you do. If you haven’t found it yet, keep looking. Don’t settle. As with all matters of the heart, you’ll know when you find it. And, like any great relationship, it just gets better and better as the years roll on. So keep looking until you find it. Don’t settle.”
– Stanford commencement speech 2005
Tags: Solar Business Resources, solar hot water for apartments, Solar Thermal incentives, steve jobs Posted in Hotel Solar Hot Water, Residential Solar Hot Water, Solar Business Resources, Solar Hot Water, Solar Hot Water for Apartment Buildings, Solar Hot Water News, solar hot water resources, Solar Tax Incentives, Solar Thermal & Solar Hot Water News, SRCC OG-300 solar systems | 1 Comment »
How Free Hot Water Got on the First Search Page of Google (and how you can too.)
Tuesday, July 5th, 2011 by Solar Fred
It’s nice to be recognized…by Google’s search engine.  How so?
Recently, if you do a search on Google for “solar water heating for apartment buildings” or “solar hot water for apartment buildings,” or “solar thermal apartment buildings,” Free Hot Water comes up in the first page of search results.
How? Why? Does it work for anyone? Let’s take those questions one by one:
How did Free Hot Water Get on the first page of search results?
Excellent question. The short answer is because we dedicate a great deal of this blog and a lot of other information to helping apartment building owners and their solar installers to go solar.
For example, in past blog posts, we’ve given several economic case studies about apartment buildings going solar, and that organically tells Google that one of our specialties is providing solar thermal equipment and design services for installing solar for ….wait for it…apartment buildings. Very simple. But that’s only part of the story.
We also provide our registered solar partner installers with apartment building resources, such as a down-loadable, apartment building solar thermal site assessment form, not to mention our online slate of solar thermal calculators.
Finally, Google sees that we’re in the solar news. Most recently, for starting California’s largest multi-residential solar water heating project under the new CSI rebate program. So, press releases and getting press also helps boost rankings too.
Bottom line: Google search engines reward solar businesses for telling people what you do and sharing specific, useful information.
Why did Free Hot Water get on the first page of search results?
Short answer: Obviously, to grow our business, but also to grow yours. Let me explain:
There are essentially two ways to get attention for your solar water heating business. Advertising or social media efforts.
Advertising, the old way, requires the least amount of effort, but it’s also costly, since it involves a lot of repetitive advertising dollars spent on Google, news papers, magazines, etc. Plus, despite this increased cost, ads provides little or no service to you, our customers. It’s a one-way, “Hey, look at our solar products!” conversation. Actually, it’s not even a conversation. It’s just telling you information.
The second way to market solar is through the new world of “social media.” That is, writing this blog , interacting on Twitter, being on Facebook and other sites. Sure, we still talk about our products here, but it’s not a one-way street. Instead, we can have a two-way dialog through your comments, reaching out to both our professional installer customers and to apartment building consumers who are searching the internet for more information about going solar.
Bottom line: Instead of focusing on advertising, we use social media to provide customers with useful solar information—like this solar marketing related post or last month’s solar thermal state incentives update. We also enable people to interact with us here or on Facebook or Twitter and respond as quickly as possible. So, this is more than just “marketing.” It’s a new form of customer service.
Does it work for anyone?
Absolutely. We’re not Heliodyne or Schuco … but we are on the first page of Google for certain search results—and you can be too.
Want more useful info? Sign up for our monthly e-newsletter, and if you’re not already, become a Free Hot Water solar partner installer. (Also, don’t forget to drop by and say hello at Intersolar! Booth 8111.)
Tags: Solar Business Resources, solar hot water case studies, solar hot water for apartments, Solar Thermal/Solar Hot Water Posted in Site Assessment, Solar Business Resources, Solar Hot Water, Solar Hot Water for Apartment Buildings, Solar Hot Water News, solar hot water resources, Solar Thermal Economics | No Comments »
News: We’ve Just Teamed Up with Boots on the Roof for Hands-on Solar Thermal Training
Sunday, June 26th, 2011 by Solar Fred

We hear from a lot of plumbers and other building contractors who ask us about how they can expand into the solar water heating business. We tell them that step one is getting qualified training. Step two is having the professional resources and support for their new solar thermal services.
Now both steps are available through a new partnership with solar thermal trainers, Boots-on-the-Roof.
Boots on the Roof offers an intensive 6-day solar thermal training program that allows building contractors to learn solar water heating design and installation fundamentals. It’s a blended learning approach that incorporates instructor-led lectures, plus hands-on labs, including the use of site-assessment tools for solar systems design.
The course is designed for plumbing companies, swimming pool contractors, HVAC contractors, and general contractors looking to add solar-thermal system installation to their existing service offerings. Solar PV contractors, architects, and engineers with plumbing experience could also benefit.
Boots training is held in a state-of-the-art facility in the San Francisco Bay Area. If you don’t live in the area, we offer a subsidized lodging package through Boots on the Roof that includes a hotel suite and free shuttle transportation from the San Jose airport (SJC) for most arrival times.
After you successfully complete the training program, you’ll graduate with the support of a professional solar industry resource: Free Hot Water. All Boots on the Roof graduates are eligible to become Certified Free Hot Water Installers.
Certified FHW installers receive professional pricing on Free Hot Water’s online catalog of over 1200 solar thermal products and free customer referrals. They also get access to our Free Hot Water engineering department, which can provide design and engineering services for lager installation projects.
Our Certified FHW Installers also can use our online library of solar water heating resources, such as site assessment forms for hotels, restaurants, apartment buildings, and more.
So, if you’re an experienced plumbing-related contractor and have been thinking about expanding into solar water and space heating, Free Hot Water and Boots on the Roof want to help you with the next steps.
Feel free to contact us or Boots on the Roof for more info.
Tags: Solar Business Resources, Solar Thermal Training Posted in Site Assessment, Solar Business Resources, Solar Hot Water, Solar Thermal Training | No Comments »
SEIA Releases 1st Qtr 2011 Solar Market Insight Report – AZ, HI, and CA Solar Hot Water Growing
Sunday, June 19th, 2011 by Solar Fred
Every three months or so, SEIA (Solar Energy Industry Association) and the good people at Greentech Media (GTM) Research put out a solar industry report, and that’s great. We’ve summed up some of the insights from the solar hot water side before, most recently for the full 2010 report.
Usually, the GTM researchers include a few juicy pages in the executive summary about our little solar thermal side of the industry. However, this latest 2011 quarter has few solar hot water insights.
Not sure if that brevity is due to the lack of industry participation or the lack of vibrancy in the market, but for what it’s worth, below is the full section from the report’s executive summary.
4. SOLAR HEATING AND COOLING
The solar heating and cooling (SHC) category is composed of two distinct markets: solar water and space heating (SWH) and solar pool heating (SPH). The domestic SWH market has grown on an annual basis since 2004. The SPH market hit a peak in 2006, and while it shrank significantly in the period 2007-2009, in 2010 it made a slight recovery with indications that this upward trend will continue in the near term.
4.1 MARKET UPDATE
Incentive changes in major markets are helping to drive installations. In Hawaii, which was the domestic market leader in 2008, a mandate (with loopholes) that systems must be installed on new homes rather than offering incentives for any system severely impacted installation numbers in 2009 and 2010. But in Q1 2011, the Hawaii Energy Efficiency (HEE) program doubled the incentive from $750 per installation to $1500 per installation using ARRA funds. The amount allotted was reserved by interested participants almost immediately. Through the end of July, HEE is offering an incentive of $1000 per installation.
In the month of March, installation rates were back to up to 2008 levels. In California, the CSI’s relatively new solar water heating incentive of up to $1,875 per installation for residential homes and $500,000 per installation for commercial and multi-family structures is helping to drive increased interest in solar water heating that we saw begin in 2010.
Arizona’s market also remains quite strong, with most utilities offering production incentives that can cover up to half of a system’s costs. Look for Arizona to be a leading market by the end of 2011.
So, that’s the full solar hot water Monty for Q1. Want to read the full executive summary report with the rest of the Solar PV and CSP insights? Download it here.
Need more insights on state solar water heating incentives? Check out our recent blog post summarizing recent solar thermal incentive changes around the U.S. since December 2010.
Tags: Solar Business Resources, solar hot water incentives, solar market reports Posted in Solar Business Resources, Solar Hot Water News, Solar Rebates, Solar Tax Incentives, Solar Thermal & Solar Hot Water News | 2 Comments »
Good News and Bad News for Maryland Solar Hot Water Incentives
Monday, June 6th, 2011 by Solar Fred
Which do you prefer to hear first? The good solar water heating incentive news in Maryland … or the bad solar water heating incentive news?
Frankly, the bad news is much less complicated, so let’s tackle that first.
The bad news: Maryland’s state rebate for residential solar water has been gutted reduced from $1,500 to $500, effective for applications received after 5 PM on June 2, 2011.
Ouch.
 Click for larger image. Map from www.SRECtrade.com
The good news: Residential solar hot water systems installed after June 1, 2011, will qualify for SREC payments. Nice, eh? Err… Except, many readers may be wondering what the heck an SREC is, and, more importantly, how much is it worth?
First things first: What is it?
- An SREC (sometimes known as a “Green Tag”) stands for Solar Renewable Energy Certificate.
- Similar to carbon credits, Maryland utilities are mandated to produce a certain amount of renewable energy every year.
- If they can’t produce that clean power through their utility-owned wind and solar projects, then they have to pay for someone else’s clean power.
- Thus, an SREC is a certificate that proves to the State that a solar system has generated 1 megawatt-hour (or 1000 kWh) of solar power. Of course, the utility needs a lot of these puppies, not just one or two.
And how much is an SREC worth?
Depends. Right now, there’s a market-based system, so the price can vary from month to month. These days, one SREC in Maryland is worth around $250, according to SRECtrad.com, a great SREC info resource.
Historically, Maryland only allowed the energy produced by solar PV systems to count as an SREC. But now, effective June 1, solar hot water systems also count… with some qualifications.
Eligibility requirements:
- Must be a Maryland residential solar hot water system that is NOT used for pool heating or Jacuzzis. Â Only home water heating.
- System must be installed on or after June 1, 2011. (However, the program doesn’t start until January 1, 2012, so no cash generation until then.).
- The system must be certified OG-300 by the SRCC with collectors that are certified OG-100. (Check our online catalog for qualifying systems.)
- Since solar hot water production is generally measured in BTUs (British Thermal Units)
- The solar production must be measured by a meter that converts BTUs to kilowatt–hours, and
- The meter must meet the required standards of the International Organization of Legal Metrology. (Naturally, our SunReports meters meet all qualifications, the company confirms.)
So, ballpark, how much can a typical residential system earn in SRECS per year with a solar hot water system? Obviously, that’s going to vary by the type of panel, insolation, the yearly weather, location, etc.
However, a typical system with two collectors may produce around 4 SRECS a year, which means around $1,000 in a typical home owner’s pocket.
One more thing: Just in case you have a big house with a large system, the state limits your SREC payments to a maximum of 5 per year, so about $1,250 at current Maryland SREC rates.
So, although the upfront rebate has been substantially reduced, Maryland lawmakers have made up for it by making solar water heating eligible for SRECS. And don’t forget that residents will also qualify for the Federal Government’s 30% tax credit.
Spread the word, Maryland solar installers! SRECS (cash!) is coming to solar hot water.
Tags: Solar Business Resources, solar hot water incentives, Solar Renewable Energy Certificates, Solar Thermal incentives, SRECS Posted in Solar Hot Water, Solar Rebates, Solar Tax Incentives, Solar Thermal Economics | 4 Comments »
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