10 Fun Facts about Solar Energy

The sun in Arizona is bountiful – why not take advantage of it by converting your home to solar power? Whether you choose a solar hot water heater, photovoltaic solar panels, or both, you’ll notice instant savings on your energy bill while making a positive impact on the environment.

Check out these 10 fun facts about solar energy, thanks to www.eco.allpurposeguru.com
  1. It takes about eight minutes for energy to travel from the sun to the earth.
  2. British scientist John Herschel figured out how to use solar power to cook his food on an African journey he took 200 years ago.
  3. Albert Einstein’s experiments on photovoltaic power (which includes solar power) won him a Nobel Prize in 1921.
  4. Photovoltaic cells made from the silicon in one ton of sand can produce as much electricity as burning 500,000 tons of coal in a power plant.
  5. California gets so much sunlight that, according to a US Department of Energy report in 2000, San Francisco could supply all of its daily electricity needs by installing solar panels on the roofs of all of its government buildings and schools.
  6. Parts of the world not blessed with California (or Arizona) sunshine cannot rely on solar power for all of their electricity, but they still benefit from it. Germany generates solar electricity on sunny days and stores some of it in storage batteries for use on cloudy days.
  7. There has been talk of placing solar panels on large tracts of desert land to generate electricity.
  8. By 2009 10,000 households in the United States went off the grid by using solar power for their homes. Power companies even buy excess electricity from these installations.
  9. Household solar systems used to be too expensive for all but the wealthiest households, but prices are at least 200% cheaper than they were 30 years ago. At the same time, solar technology has become more efficient and reliable.
  10. Short of converting an entire house to solar power, it is possible to install solar hot water heaters, shed and attic lights and ventilation, and outdoor lighting. There are even solar chargers for cell phones and other modern electronic gadgets. Decorative lighting for decks and gardens that would be an extravagant waste of power from the grid become eco friendly when they’re solar powered.