Back to Chelan County PUD's main website »

Posts Tagged ‘photovoltaic’

Make a SNAP decision

Posted in Environment, Solar on April 30th, 2013 by Susan – Be the first to comment
Photo of Gro Buer and Bruce Williams

Thirty-eight solar panels are planted next to the vegetable garden of Gro Buer and Bruce Williams, new SNAP producers in Leavenworth.

Solar and wind power program relies on customer support

Here’s an easy way to contribute to the “greening” of our valley: Sign up to support Sustainable Natural Alternative Power (SNAP).

Customers who support SNAP agree to pay a little extra each month on their utility bills. These funds go into a pool that are divided once a year among schools, nonprofit agencies and private producers of solar, wind and small-hydro power in Chelan County.

Eight solar producers joined SNAP in the past year, helping push the program to a production record of 175,142 kilowatt hours of energy. The eight new producers, all with fixed solar systems, added 26 kW of capacity. They are:

Vic Rasmussen, 1521 Medina Pl., Wenatchee
Gail Mueller, 2986 Lakeshore Dr., Manson
Gro Buer and Bruce Williams, 8050 E. Leavenworth Road, Leavenworth
Greg and Mary Steeber, 12512 Wilson St., Leavenworth
John Smith, 5108 Old Blewett Pass Road, Peshastin
Harrison Mekeel, 654 Loop Ave., Manson
Travis Fox, 6555 Pioneer Ave., Cashmere
Chuck Fowler, 10420 North Road, Leavenworth

Three applications are pending for SNAP installations in Leavenworth, Manson and Wenatchee.

In addition to SNAP payments, producers are taking advantage of generous state-sponsored incentives. Producers using solar modules and inverters manufactured in Washington are eligible for the highest payouts available through the state’s renewable incentive program. Taking advantage of the state incentives, in addition to SNAP, brings a faster return on investment.

The state payments come from the state’s utility tax fund; SNAP payments come from PUD customers interested in renewable energy. Customers contributed $24,674 this past year for payments of 14 cents per kilowatt hour to SNAP producers.

Meet the producers and get program details for 2013 in the SNAP Annual Report.

Science educators name a champion

Posted in Energy conservation, Renewable energy, Solar on March 28th, 2013 by Susan – Be the first to comment
Photo of Jim White talking to fourth graders at Columbia Elementary

Jim White talks to Wenatchee fourth-graders about how energy from the sun can power cars and more.

Chelan PUD’s Jim White earns statewide award

Around the office, we think of engineer Jim White as something of a wizard. Now the state has recognized him as a science champion.

White, an indefatigable advocate for solar power and renewable energy,  received the  Science Education Advocate Award from the state LASER program — Leadership and Assistance for Science Education Reform. The award recognizes outstanding individuals who have exhibited exceptional support and advocacy for science education in Washington.

White, a senior energy conservation engineer, has been with Chelan PUD for 15 years. He developed the PUD’s Sustainable Natural Alternative Power (SNAP) program which led the way for small-scale solar installations in the state. He conceived and built a zero-energy trailer used to demonstrate renewable energy and energy efficiency at public events; the trailer is now used by instructors at Shoreline College. 

White built a solar go-kart in his garage which was test-driven by his own children before White used it to visit fourth-grade classrooms as a fun teaching aid. He helped Wenatchee High School students build and race a real solar dragster, and last year led students at Cashmere Middle School in a project to build and race Barbie-doll-size solar cars. He helped a  friend, Marcelo da Luz, drive the  Xof1 solar car over the longest ice road in the world to Tuktoyaktuk, Northwest Territories, where the car was used to teach native school children about renewable energy.

He is a sought-after presenter at Earth Day celebrations and school science fairs. When he’s not busy with renewable energy, he’s busy as a Boy Scout leader and volunteer at numerous community projects.

“My hope is that science education in Washington will teach us all how to survive and thrive, without destroying the natural beauty that surrounds us,” White said. When working with children, his goal has always been to make science fun.

To that end, White built a solar popcorn popper and a solar-operated splash fountain. What kid can resist a chance to splash in a fountain on a warm summer day?

The award is given annually to individuals, organizations or projects that show enthusiastic support for science education. Four individuals and one organization received awards this year.

Each received $5,000, to be awarded to the not-for-profit public education entity of their choice. White designated his award for the North Central Educational Service District to buy about 150 reusable solar car kits for classrooms.

The  reward and recognition program are funded by Boeing.

LASER is a public/private partnership launched in 1999. The Washington State LASER partnership is led by the Strategic Programs Division of Pacific Science Center in Seattle and the Office of Science & Engineering Education at the Pacific Northwest National Laboratory.

White talks about the importance of science education on the LASER website here.

SNAP home featured in Leavenworth tour

Posted in Renewable energy, Solar on August 31st, 2012 by Susan – Be the first to comment
Photos of Williams and Buer solar installation

Solar modules at the home of Bruce Williams and Gro Buer, 8050 East Leavenworth Road, will be part of the Cascade Medical Center Foundation's tour on Sept. 9.

The home of SNAP producers Bruce Williams and Gro Buer is one of six featured in the Cascade Medical Foundation’s 17th Annual Home and Garden Tour on Sunday, Sept . 9, from noon to 5 p.m. in Leavenworth.

Williams and Buer have been Sustainable Natural Alternative Power producers since July. They operate a 7-kilowatt installation behind their home at 8050 East Leavenworth Road.

Information about the SNAP program will be available at the tour. SNAP links Chelan PUD customers who want to support the development of solar and wind power with customers interested in producing that power. The program includes 46 producers of solar power and two wind power generators.

Homes and gardens in the tour are among the most beautiful in the Leavenworth area, said Chris Clark, tour chairman. The tour is a fundraiser for the Family Practice Clinic. Tickets are $20 per person. Tickets are available at Cascade Medical Center’s Admitting Desk, 817 Commercial St., Leavenworth, and will be available at the individual homes on the day of the tour. Visitors can begin the tour at any of the homes.

Find more information on the Cascade Medical Foundation website, or call or email Clark at (509) 860-1963,  imbikin@gmail.com.

Sign up for SNAP and be happy

Posted in Renewable energy, Solar, Uncategorized on March 28th, 2012 by Susan – Be the first to comment

Flower Power graphicSign up to support SNAP – Chelan PUD’s solar and wind energy program – and receive a free solar-powered “happy flower” for your desktop or windowsill. Drop by any PUD office to sign up and collect your fun flower.

Under SNAP, customers voluntarily pay a little extra on their utility bills. These customer donations are collected by the PUD and distributed once a year to our SNAP producers – individuals, schools and nonprofit agencies that are generating solar and wind power. Renewable energy generated by SNAP producers goes into the PUD’s electrical grid and is distributed to PUD customers.

Sign up to have a contribution added to your monthly electric bill, and pick up your “happy flower.” Don’t delay: Offer available while supplies last.

Watch the flowers in action: Flower Power video

Energy, machines and people in motion

Posted in Electric vehicles, Renewable energy, Solar on February 6th, 2012 by Susan – Be the first to comment

Picture 1 of 5

Students use 3D glasses to view the color spectrum.

PUD experts help students make sense of science

Attention Cashmere Middle School parents: If your seventh grader asks you for permission to ski behind a solar-powered car over the frozen highways of Canada, blame Jim White.

White, a Chelan County PUD engineer, and Eric Sydenstricker, PUD technician, are helping students in Bob Martin’s seventh grade science class build their own solar-powered model cars. To introduce the concept, White showed the class a YouTube video of him ice-skiing behind a car that operates totally on solar energy. Not to be outdone, Sydenstricker led the class outdoors, putting his radio-controlled monster truck through a parking-lot snow bank to show off its road skills.

Pretty cool stuff, huh?

The Cashmere demonstration in January kicked off a pilot program that’s bringing PUD employees into classrooms at four middle schools this year. Ruth Erwert, recruiting program manager and Bob Bauer, communications specialist at the PUD, brought the idea to the North Central Educational Service District (ESD). Mechelle LaLanne, ESD science coordinator, worked with teachers and ESD staff to develop the program. Erwert’s goal is to make students aware of career opportunities and “build a pipeline of future workers,” she said. LaLanne’s goal is to place experts in the classrooms to complement the curriculum, which in seventh grade focuses on energy, machines and motion.

The other middle schools and their projects are:

Entiat, where students are working with teacher Kevin Jones to learn about electrical circuits and how they operate mechanical devices. PUD experts offering help and encouragement are John Sagerser, Paul Resler and Cheryl Hobson.

Pioneer in Wenatchee. Under teacher Carolyn Dotter, students plan to investigate the challenges of underwater welding and mechanics. PUD divers Donnie Lane and Brent Thrapp are assisting.

Orchard in Wenatchee. Teacher Dan Myers is working with his students to build a working model of Rocky Reach Dam. PUD employees on that project are Dan Martyn, Tim Halliday, Andy Lolos and Eric Ostrom.

PUD staff will be in the classrooms once a week for six to eight weeks. Then as soon as school is out, students can attend the Action Academy at Rocky Reach. For four half days during the week of June 18, they’ll show-and-tell about their projects, take tours of the dam, talk about how their classroom work correlates to work at the dam, and hear from more PUD staff about career options in other fields.

“Whether students attend a four-year college, a technical school, or stay in the community and apply for an apprenticeship or entry-level job, we want them to realize there are opportunities with our utility,” Erwert said.