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"Solar power is now the cheapest form of energy in almost 60 countries"
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"Solar Power is Now the World's Cheapest Energy" (Popular Mechanics)
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"What Would The Economic Impact Be If Everyone Installed Solar..."
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"Will Power Plant Rules Cause Blackouts?"
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Can Batteries Be Used to Store Renewable Energy?
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Conflict Minerals: "The Uncomfortable Choice..."
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Conflict Minerals: "Were Your Solar Panels Made with Conflict Minerals?"
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Conflict Minerals: Sunpower's Conflict Minerals Policy
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How Much Land Would It Take to Power the U.S. with Solar? Article 1
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How Much Land Would it take to Power the U.S. with Solar? Article 2
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Photovoltaic Cells (Univ. of Calgary, Canada)
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Photovoltaics (Stanford)
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Solar Energy (MIT)
Part of MIT's "The Future Of" series of research reports that analyzes the future of different energy industries up to 2050.
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Solar Energy (U.C. Berkeley Solar Energy Research Center)
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Solar Energy (U.S. Energy Information Administration)
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Solar Thermal Energy (IEA--International Energy Agency)
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Solar Thermal Energy (Stanford)
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Solar Thermal Power (U.S. Energy Information Administration)
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Solar: Cost of installing panels for the state capitol (PG&E Solar Calculator Report)
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Solar: Could solar save money for people who do NOT have solar panels?
From Boston University
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Solar: Declining Solar Cost
Scientific American
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Solar: Opposing viewpoint on residential solar
This blog post by a U.C. Berkeley business professor questions whether distributed generation, or DG (when power is generated at the same place where it's consumed...like you have solar panels on your roof and you use the power in your house) is really the most effective way to help the planet and save consumers money.
Last Modified on February 14, 2017