How Schools Are Going Solar
The cost for individual homes in the U.S. to “go solar” has dropped by more than 60 percent over the last decade.
Those low costs helped convince more than a million Americans to install solar panels on their roofs.
Now schools are beginning to get in on the benefits. One of them is the school system in Fremont, Indiana.
The residents of this small town in America’s upper Midwest have always relied on the sun to warm their fields and draw tourists to their lakes. Now school superintendent William Stitt said they’re counting on it to power their schools.
“The technology has advanced so much in the last couple of years that it’s become more energy efficient, more cost effective for schools to get solar energy,” Stitt said.
Start-up cost
Construction of the solar project will cost $3 million. But when finished, it will completely power the elementary, middle and high school buildings. It may generate so much electricity, that the school will be able to sell some back to the power company at a profit. Read more…