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Benefits of Solar
 
Solar energy is pollution-free, an important benefit when the cost of removing pollutants from the environment is considered. For example, a typical SWH system will, over its lifetime, displace 10.5tons of CO2 if replacing a natural gas system, or 71.5 tons if replacing an electric system.
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Readily Available Resource

The U. S. Department of Energy estimates that Americans consume approximately 2.5 quads of end-use energy annually to produce hot water at a cost of over $20 billion dollars. Solar energy currently provides only a tiny fraction of that demand, but huge portions of our country possess sufficient insolation to produce much greater quantities of energy.

Enough sunlight reaches the earth’s surface each yearto produce approximately 1000 times the same amount of energy produced by burning all fossil fuels mined and extracted during the same period. Sunlight does not have to be explored, mined, extracted, transported, combusted, transmitted or imported.
Quality, Reliability, Durability

Much of the United States receives abundant sunshine, making solar hot water systems a very economical investment. This map shows the average daily solar radiation available on a south-facing surface measured in megajoules per square meter each day.

Made in America

In 1960, jobs within the energy industry (including coal mining, oil and gas extraction, petroleum refining, electric and gas utilities) represented about 1.8 percent of total U. S. employment. By 1990 that share fell to 1.2 percent. “This ratio likely will decline further over the next decade,” the U. S. Center for Global Climate Change reported in 1993.

Employment patterns resulting from conventional energy technologies are dominated by the capital-intensive nature of the industry. When measured in jobs per million dollars of annual expenditure, coal, oil, gas and nuclear technologies support among the fewest jobs of any economic activity.” The solar water heating industry is a good example of the type of manufacturing needed to create both new skilled and unskilled jobs.
Realizing the Potential

Several utilities all across the country—from the Sun Belt to the Midwest and Northeast— offer consumers a variety of programs to reduce the initial cost of solar systems. In turn, the utility avoids the cost of installing additional generating capacity, especially power to meet peak energy demand, and using solar energy helps the utility comply with every-increasing restrictions on pollution emissions.

These systems are examples of installations resulting from a demand—side management program at Sacramento Municipal Utility District.
The answer has been up there all the time - solar energy.
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