Build Your Own Solar Power Generator for Under $200!

By admin | Nov 12, 2008

Dont pay for your electricity any longer.
Instead, the power company will pay YOU!

This book will help you reduce your power bill by 80% or even eliminate it completely. notonly that, if you create more energy than you use, your power comapny will actually pay you! This Earth4Energy kit is going to show you everything you need to know about creating electricty from your very own backyard.

If you are intersted in learning eactly how to generate power and reduce your bill, than this is the perfect resource for you!

Whether you want to simply reduce your power bills or completely eliminate them this book from Earth4Energy has a solution for you.

Why pay thousands for wind or solar power when you can build your own professional system for less than $200

Here are just a few topics covered in this manual:

  • What to do before you start - Without this information yhour whole attempt to create useable electricity could be pointless
  • How exactly does solar power work - learn the whole process
  • Build your own wind power generator - A professional looking generator for under $200
  • Free bonus chapter - How you can reduce your oil dependence
  • This is just a short list of the topics covered in this manual!!

Act Now and Start Saving Today

Buy Today! Click Here 

Advances in Solar Absorbtion Rates Brings Affordable Solar Closer

By admin | Nov 12, 2008

High efficiency, cost effective solar panels have gotten just a little closer. Researchers at Rensselaer Polytechnic Institute have just discovered and actually demonstrated a method for applying a new antireflective coating that will reduce glare and therefore increase the amount of sunlight aborbed.

This coating not only cuts down glare, but allows light to be absorbed from every angle. A standard untreated silicon solar cell only aborbs about 67.4 percent of sunlight that hits it. Thats almost 1/3 of the sunlight being reflected away and not able to be used. After treatment with this new coating, the same silicon chip can aborb 96.21 percent of light, only losing just over 3% to reflection. The gain in absorbtion is consistent across th entire spectrum.

Shawn-Yu Lin was the leader of the project that pushed this reasearch along. Lin is a professor physics at Rensselaer and a mamber of Future Chips Constellation.

Funding for the project was provided by the U.S. Department of Energy’s Office of Basic Energy Sciences, as well as the U.S. Air Force Office of Scientific Research.

Will Solar Power Be Quickly Forgotten?

By admin | Oct 16, 2008
Carrizo Power Planet (1984)

Carrizo Power Planet (1984)

As they say, ‘History repeats itself’. I’ve been watching TV…not just in couch potatoe mode, but actually watching whats being said and done on television and in the media itself. I’m concerned that something that has occurred before in this country is about to repeat itself.

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India’s Power Problem

By admin | Sep 6, 2008

     India is having a civil war of sorts over power. Part of India wants nuclear power, part wants renewable power, primarily CSP trough solar power generators. Both hold great promise, both require substantial amounts of land to generate the required level of power, and both are vying for the same land in India’s heavy populatged interior. This is of course not real war, but it is making for a decion that will need to be made by India, and soon. Nuclear or Renewable.

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Solar Safari in Africa

By admin | Aug 19, 2008

NEW YORK (Reuters Life!) - A solar-powered safari camp in Kenya and an environmentally conscious Amazon resort were awarded annual travel prizes on Monday for giving back to their communities while also providing luxurious lodgings. The resorts were among 38 recognised by magazine Conde Nast Traveler for doing good, while at the same time doing well themselves, with its second annual World Savers Awards.

The awards were set up to recognise resorts making efforts to preserve the environment, alleviate poverty, further education, conserve wildlife and improve health. Campi ya Kanzi, a Kenyan safari camp powered by solar energy and primarily staffed by members of the local Maasai tribe, (http://www.maasai.com), came out tops for alleviating poverty.

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