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Articles > Past Issues > 2008 > September 2008 > Higher Power

Higher Power

Is solar a smart choice for businesses?

Peter Seif

>>Any time we start to believe that fossil fuels are running out or we see their costs going way up, renewable sources of power, such as solar, come to the forefront of people’s minds—including mine. So I started thinking about the feasibility of the sun providing the primary source of power for companies.

How It Works

There are different types of solar-powered systems. Two such systems, solar thermal and solar photovoltaic, use solar panels to convert the sun’s energy. Solar thermal uses the sun’s energy to heat water, which then is converted to electricity. Solar photovoltaic uses the sun’s energy to "knock loose" electrons and then convert the created energy into electricity.

Solar-generated electricity can be used directly, stored in a battery for later use, or put back into the public power/utility grid and drawn back out when insufficient electricity is being produced to meet the user’s needs. (When solar energy is put into a public-utility grid, the user/producer’s utility meter will actually spin backward.) Power companies in 40 states have programs that will buy the electricity that you produce through solar.

Weighing Our Options

My colleagues and I tried to figure out if enough energy could be produced by the sun to power our collocation facility, which serves about 200 corporate customers and houses all of our Internet equipment—mail servers, Web servers and other customers’ servers. A lengthy research effort revealed that there is not a lot of information available about the viability of converting offices to solar power.

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