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March 6, 2010 at 3:15 PM in reply to: Why the Long Term Doom and gloom forecasts for California are wrong !! #522827
Aecetia
ParticipantI live in an association with some landscaped areas that have lawns, trees, paths and barbecues. We have three wells to pay for the landscape which works pretty well. Unfortunately, during the drought, the Indian wells that were dug (super wells) took most of the water. I am all for self-sufficiency and would like a windmill if we could have it.
Aecetia
ParticipantI live in an association with some landscaped areas that have lawns, trees, paths and barbecues. We have three wells to pay for the landscape which works pretty well. Unfortunately, during the drought, the Indian wells that were dug (super wells) took most of the water. I am all for self-sufficiency and would like a windmill if we could have it.
Aecetia
ParticipantI live in an association with some landscaped areas that have lawns, trees, paths and barbecues. We have three wells to pay for the landscape which works pretty well. Unfortunately, during the drought, the Indian wells that were dug (super wells) took most of the water. I am all for self-sufficiency and would like a windmill if we could have it.
Aecetia
ParticipantI live in an association with some landscaped areas that have lawns, trees, paths and barbecues. We have three wells to pay for the landscape which works pretty well. Unfortunately, during the drought, the Indian wells that were dug (super wells) took most of the water. I am all for self-sufficiency and would like a windmill if we could have it.
Aecetia
ParticipantI live in an association with some landscaped areas that have lawns, trees, paths and barbecues. We have three wells to pay for the landscape which works pretty well. Unfortunately, during the drought, the Indian wells that were dug (super wells) took most of the water. I am all for self-sufficiency and would like a windmill if we could have it.
Aecetia
ParticipantMaybe he is trying to get to heaven to pay for being the “Exalted Cyclops” a long time ago.
Aecetia
ParticipantMaybe he is trying to get to heaven to pay for being the “Exalted Cyclops” a long time ago.
Aecetia
ParticipantMaybe he is trying to get to heaven to pay for being the “Exalted Cyclops” a long time ago.
Aecetia
ParticipantMaybe he is trying to get to heaven to pay for being the “Exalted Cyclops” a long time ago.
Aecetia
ParticipantMaybe he is trying to get to heaven to pay for being the “Exalted Cyclops” a long time ago.
Aecetia
ParticipantI agree with the do it yourself for cost savings if you have the ability and I totally support that. There are a many rebates and tax credits that make solar more affordable at this time:
AB 920 requires utility companies to pay households or businesses for any extra electricity produced by the customer’s solar power system. Supporters said the bill would encourage customers, who previously had no incentive to use less electricity than was generated, to be more efficient.
SB 32 expands the feed-in tariff program for large-scale solar facilities from 1.5 megawatts to 3 megawatts, potentially pushing utilities to construct massive solar installations on unused spaces like parking lots and warehouse roofs.
Aecetia
ParticipantI agree with the do it yourself for cost savings if you have the ability and I totally support that. There are a many rebates and tax credits that make solar more affordable at this time:
AB 920 requires utility companies to pay households or businesses for any extra electricity produced by the customer’s solar power system. Supporters said the bill would encourage customers, who previously had no incentive to use less electricity than was generated, to be more efficient.
SB 32 expands the feed-in tariff program for large-scale solar facilities from 1.5 megawatts to 3 megawatts, potentially pushing utilities to construct massive solar installations on unused spaces like parking lots and warehouse roofs.
Aecetia
ParticipantI agree with the do it yourself for cost savings if you have the ability and I totally support that. There are a many rebates and tax credits that make solar more affordable at this time:
AB 920 requires utility companies to pay households or businesses for any extra electricity produced by the customer’s solar power system. Supporters said the bill would encourage customers, who previously had no incentive to use less electricity than was generated, to be more efficient.
SB 32 expands the feed-in tariff program for large-scale solar facilities from 1.5 megawatts to 3 megawatts, potentially pushing utilities to construct massive solar installations on unused spaces like parking lots and warehouse roofs.
Aecetia
ParticipantI agree with the do it yourself for cost savings if you have the ability and I totally support that. There are a many rebates and tax credits that make solar more affordable at this time:
AB 920 requires utility companies to pay households or businesses for any extra electricity produced by the customer’s solar power system. Supporters said the bill would encourage customers, who previously had no incentive to use less electricity than was generated, to be more efficient.
SB 32 expands the feed-in tariff program for large-scale solar facilities from 1.5 megawatts to 3 megawatts, potentially pushing utilities to construct massive solar installations on unused spaces like parking lots and warehouse roofs.
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