One of the biggest solar energy providers in the country is
expanding into South Jersey.
SolarCity opened an operations center in Blackwood, Camden
County, last month in a bid to tap into what the company says is a growing
demand among middle-class homeowners for the technology.
The San Mateo, Calif., company installs solar panels on
south-facing sunny rooftops free of charge. Customers sign 20-year contracts,
paying for the energy those systems provide.
Photovoltaic solar cells convert sunlight directly into
electricity. Solar is more competitive with traditional power sources in New
Jersey because of the state's relatively high utility rates.
The Blackwood operations center features an
8,500-square-foot warehouse where crews haul the panels and other raw materials
onto trucks and take them to houses for installation.
SolarCity, which has about 1,800 residential customers in
the state, also has offices in Princeton and Cranbury Township, Middlesex
County.
Before launching operations in Blackwood, crews would drive
hours to install panels in Cape May. Installations could take up to three days,
said Lee Keshishian, East Coast regional vice president.
Workers in Blackwood aim to get to job sites within 30 to 45
minutes to slash transportation costs and boost efficiency. Now a single crew
can complete an installation in less than a day, operations manager Russ
Pierson said.
"Yes, we're a large national company," Keshishian
said during a tour of the facility Friday. "But we're very much about
being a local operation."
SolarCity's chairman is Elon Musk, the entrepreneur behind
such high-profile ventures as the Tesla electric car and the SpaceX rocket
company. SolarCity was attracted to South Jersey because of its demographics
and newer housing stock, Keshishian said, noting that modern houses are more
suited to solar panels.
Customers generally save 10 percent to 20 percent on their
utility bills, he said. In New Jersey, the fastest-growing areas for rooftop
solar have median incomes ranging from $30,000 to $40,000, according to an
October report by the Center for American Progress, a liberal think tank in
Washington. That trend tracks closely with other growth markets in California
and Arizona, the study found.
Source: Philly.com
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