In 1954 we figured out how to harness energy using silicon-based solar cells in California, the sunniest of all places in the US. Which is the home of solar panels; this idea has been discovered and rediscovered many times. The issue is the expense of the equipment, weather and accessibility, along with the monopoly of the electric companies.
Solar panels have been used in California, Texas, and the plains states for many, many important things that have proven they would be great for the economy. So we must convince the Governments on a federal and state level to pass legislation to support solar energy.
When you think about it, solar energy has been used to water crops and feed livestock, whereas before, farmers would have enormous energy expenses. This cuts into the daily living of the people who consume the meat and grain products that the farmers sell to the corporations. It is simple, when the overhead is crazy expensive, so is the product that we are purchasing, and this is driving the economy into a worse situation, this is why we have to take action.
The Government did pass legislation in 1978 to allow alternative power-sourcing companies to interconnect with the existing power companies. Shortly after that in California, the largest producer of solar panels in Irvine out of Camarillo, CA. was born and still functions today, maintaining its reputation.
Shortly after that, the LUZ-SEGS was born in the Mojave Desert. This is the world’s largest thermal energy facility. It looks really neat to visit if you get the chance and are into alternative energy sources. It has a power plant in the background with rows and rows of mirrors that reflect the sunlight into the PV cells. The history of this company is interesting; they ran into financial issues and were sold, but the new owners picked the business up again shortly thereafter, and they are still generating power some 20 years later!
In 1996 the US Government began to run an extension of the ‘Solar one; program to the ‘Solar two’ program, which ran until its end some years later. The programmer proved that the system could create, draw and use power even when conditions were cloudy long-term and there was no sunshine.
There are many prototype towns that are built solely on solar energy and electric cars, along with crops and services which promote self-sufficiency. These prototypes are set to grow in the United States and spotty parts of the world like Germany and Scandinavia.