Monday, November 30, 2015


New solar project set to shave power costs in Amsterdam; 2,000-panel array is city's biggest

AMSTERDAM, New York — There's a new bright spot in Amsterdam, New York — a solar-power project that's expected to save the old industrial city thousands of dollars a year in electrical costs.
Amsterdam's new "solar garden" is expected to go online Monday, the Daily Gazette (http://bit.ly/1OwUUUr) of Schenectady reported Saturday.


Built on a decommissioned reservoir, the 2,000-panel array is the biggest solar project to date in the city of 18,000 people, about 35 miles from Albany.
"It's good news for Amsterdam, because we're repurposing the property, and the residents will benefit because it's new revenue to the city," Mayor Ann Thane told the newspaper.


The project is expected to generate enough electricity to power the city's water and wastewater plants and pump station.
Monolith Solar paid to build the array, with the city agreeing in return to buy power from it for 20 years, at about 30 percent below prevailing energy rates, Monolith Solar account manager Tim Carr told the Daily Gazette. The city expects to save $40,000 in the first year and $1.3 million over 20 years.
After that, the city can buy the system, extend the agreement in five-year intervals or end the deal and have Monolith Solar dismantle the array, he said.


Amsterdam already has smaller, rooftop arrays on a bus garage and public safety building. With the new project, Amsterdam's municipal buildings will get about one-third of their power from solar energy, according to state Assemblyman Angelo Santabarbara's office. The array also took advantage of state incentives for solar installations.


Set on the Mohawk River, Amsterdam was once one of the nation's leading carpet and rug manufacturing centers. It's also the hometown of actor Kirk Douglas and has a park named in his honor.

Tuesday, November 17, 2015

Nothing makes us happier than giving our customers money for referring others to us! This is one happy customer! $$$


Hoosick Falls solar garden now open


Officials at the ribbon cutting for a new solar garden in Hoosick Falls.Photo by Nicholas Buonanno – nbuonanno@digitalfirstmedia.com
Solar panels at at the solar garden in Hoosick Falls.Photo by Nicholas Buonanno – nbuonanno@digitalfirstmedia.com
Hoosick Falls >> A partnership between the Village of Hoosick Falls and a solar company will bring clean energy to the Rensselaer County village.
The village announced a partnership with Monolith Solar to create a solar garden in an old landfill on Walnut Street. The new solar garden is comprised of ground-mounted solar panels on village-owned land at the closed landfill.
Completion of this project was years in the making. After three years of set up, various state and local officials, along with company representatives opened the facility Monday.
The new solar garden is a 592.92 kilowatt system and it will save the village over $40,000 during its first year. The solar garden has a total of 1,944 solar panels, which will provide up to 60 percent of the municipal electricity to the village. The village and Monolith Solar have entered a 20-year agreement.
Tim Carr of Monolith Solar said, “over this new 20- year plan at this location, the village of Hoosick Falls will save over $1.3 million with no cost to the village.”
Village mayor David Borge was on hand during the ribbon cutting ceremony Monday.
“This is land that couldn’t be used for anything but for the transfer station which is very attractive but now we have this land being put to its most productive use,” he said.
Rensselaer County Executive Kathy Jimino helped to play a part during the process of getting this solar garden set up, officials said.
Jimino said she is proud of this project and she said, that she wanted to congratulate Mayor Borge and his board for this innovative reuse of this land and that it is a great spot to think to use an old landfill for this important new solar garden.
Jeff Cleary,a representative from Senator Kathleen Marchione’s office said, “Mayor David Borge is always working hard to find interesting ways to help out his village and that this is just tremendous use of land.”
Borge is currently in talks with the county to be able to more solar panels around Hoosick Falls over the next few years so that the village can one day run completely off completely solar energy. Borge said he looks forward to Hoosick Falls developing a reputation for being a green community.
Nicholas Buonanno can be reached at 518-290-8362.

Tuesday, November 3, 2015

Very Excited to Announce our Newest Project in Buffalo!

Solar garden to be installed in Newfane

 Town officials announced at a ground breaking ceremony on Monday that a solar garden will be installed at the Newfane Old Apple Orchard location.

 Check out this story on WGRZ.com: http://on.wgrz.com/1MtUlqM

Friday, August 28, 2015

Customer Review

"To Whom it May Concern:

I would just like to share my gratitude regarding the installation of my solar array last Thursday and Friday.  Kevin was the Foreman, and I can say that he and his crew were a true class act.  Everyone involved worked hard, and they were all a pleasure to be around and deal with.  I took the day off of work to ensure that nothing would go wrong, but it was very clear to me that I did not need to be there.  Any issue that they ran into, they were able to solve.  They didn't take any shortcuts, and they took pride in their craftsmanship.

My array was up and producing around noon on Friday, and it seems to be working great.  I will be recommending Monolith to anyone that is thinking of going solar, and I will specifically recommend the crew you sent my way to be made part of their deal.

If you have any questions regarding what I have stated above, please do not hesitate to contact me."

Take care.

Jason Serra
518-265-9253

Tuesday, August 18, 2015

Why the Solar Industry Needs More Women



Today, women make up 51% of professional workers in the United States.  This is a major achievement from 1972, when women represented just 38 percent of the workforce.1 Since then, many opportunities have opened for women in technical fields such as science, math and engineering.  According to the Solar Foundation’s National Solar Jobs Census, nineteen percent of all solar workers were women in 2013, representing 26,738 solar workers2. The women at Monolith Solar Associates are proud to assist this upward trend of female workers in a male dominated industry.  With the solar industry at the brink of a major expansion in the United States, there are endless opportunities for women to thrive in this business.  In the last decade, the solar industry created 100,000 new jobs3. The renewable energy industry in general is a great opportunity for women all around the world. 
1 "Women in the Professional Workforce." DPEAFLCIO. Department for Professional Employees, Feb. 2015. Web. 17 Aug. 2015.
2 "National Solar Jobs Census 2013, The Solar Foundation." The Annual Review of the U.S. Solar Workforce. Jan. 2014. Web. 17 Aug. 2015.

Monday, July 6, 2015

We love solar - you should too!

USB Analysts: Solar will become the 'Default Technology of the Future'

http://www.greentechmedia.com/articles/read/ubs-analysts-solar-will-become-the-default-technology-of-the-future

LARGE PROJECTS DRIVE MONOLITH SOLAR'S GROWTH

Steve Erby, vice president of Monolith SolarAssociates, has two ambitious goals for the solar company to reach within the next year: Move into the Vista Technology Park by January and add up to 50 employees.
"January is a very aggressive move-in date, but I'm a very big believer in setting goals," Erby says.
Since the company started in 2009, operating out of Erby's garage, the size of its solar projects has grown. Monolith's new location in the Vista Technology Campus will feature a 2 million-watt system. During Monolith's early years, the largest project the company completed was a 25,000-watt system.The company will hire between 40 and 50 people, adding to the 60 current employees. That growth is driven by a number of large projects, including a solar farm for Rensselaer County. Monolith is also working on solar farms for Schenectady County and the Sage Colleges, among others.
"People are realizing solar is here to stay and it"s in for the long haul," Erby says.

Monday, May 18, 2015

Cambridge Central School District - First Solar in Washington County!!

CAMBRIDGE, N.Y. >> Cambridge Central School recently completed the installation of a solar panel array at both the District Offices/Bus Garage and the school campus. The solar array was installed by Monolith Solar, and represents the first large scale solar array installed at a public school in Washington County. The CCS Solar Power Project was part of the continuing efforts of the school's Energy and Sustainability Committee, which has worked over the past 9 years to make recommendations to the Board of Education on ways to make the school more energy efficient and sustainable.

The Solar Power Project came at no cost to the school district, as it was part of a power purchase agreement between CCS and Monolith Solar. This project had no impact on the taxpayer and has created the opportunity for CCS to purchase energy at a reduced rate, while also educating students about the benefits of renewable energy resources. The CCS Solar array is made up of two separate systems. One system is installed on the roof of the K-12 school building. This system is made up of 671 panels, with each panel producing 300 watts. The total system size is 201,300 watts and is expected to produce over 202,000 kilowatt-hours of energy annually. This will offset about 139 metric tons of carbon dioxide emissions, and will supply around 26 percent of the school's annual electricity needs.

The District Office/Bus Garage system is comprised of 275 panels, producing 82,500 watts. This array is expected to produce over 83,000 kilowatt-hours of energy annually. This offsets about 57.2 metric tons of carbon dioxide emissions, and will supply 100 percent of the building's electricity needs. Specific information about the solar panels, including real time data can be found at www.cambridgecsd.org.


Thursday, April 9, 2015

City of Troy Goes Solar






The city of Troy is  planning to install a 3 megawatt solar farm on several city-owned properties as part of a deal that could save the city $300,000 annually in electric costs.
Last month the city council authorized the mayor to sign a memorandum of understanding with Monolith Solar of Rensselaer to build the solar farm, which would be paid for up front by Monolith.
The city would enter into a 20-year power purchase agreement with Monolith to buy the solar power, which would net the city roughly $300,000 in annual credits from National Grid.


Monday, March 9, 2015

New York is moving on up!!

New York Just Showed Every Other State How to Do Solar Right

"This is as exciting as the Public Service Commission gets."
New York wants to get serious about solar power. The state has a goal to cut its greenhouse gas emissions 80 percent below 1990 levels by 2050, and it's already among the nation's solar leaders. New York ranks ninth overall for total installed solar, and in 2013 alone it added enough to power more than 10,000 homes.
While that's great news for solar companies and environmentalists, it's a bit of a problem for electric utilities. Until recently, the business model of electric companies hadn't changed much since it was created a century ago. (The country's first electric grid was strung up by Thomas Edison in Manhattan's Lower East Side in the 1880s, and some parts of it continued to operate into the 2000s.) Utilities have depended on a steady growth in demand to stay ahead of the massive investments required to build power plants and the electric grid. But now, that tradition is crumbling—thanks to the crazy growth of rooftop solar and other alternative energy sources and some big advances in energy efficiency that have caused the overall demand for electricity to stop growing. Meanwhile, utilities in New York are also required to buy the excess power from solar buildings that produce more than they need—a policy called "net metering".
But here's the thing: Even the most ardent climate hawks agree that we can't afford for utilities to go out of business altogether. Someone needs to maintain and manage the grid. Hardly any solar homes are actually "off the grid," since they still depend on power lines to soak up their excess electricity during sunny afternoons and deliver power at night. In fact, net metering is a key factor in making solar economically viable to homeowners.
The question of how to aggressively slash carbon emissions without completely undermining the power sector (and simultaneously raising the risk of blackouts and skyrocketing electric bills) is one of the big existential questions that climate-savvy lawmakers are now trying to figure out. And last week in New York, they took a huge step forward.
Under a new order from the state's Public Service Commission, utility companies will soon be barred from owning "distributed" power systems—that means rooftop solar, small wind turbines, and basically anything else that isn't a big power plant. (There are some rare exceptions built into the order, notably for giant low-income apartment buildings in New York City that small solar companies aren't well-equipped to serve.)
"By restricting utilities from owning local power generation and other energy resources, customers will benefit from a more competitive market, with utilities working and partnering with other companies and service providers," the commission said in a statement.
The move is part of a larger package of energy reforms in the state, aimed at setting up the kind of futuristic power system that experts think will be needed to combat global warming. The first step came in 2007, when the state adopted "decoupling," a market design in which a utility's revenue is based not on how much power it sells, but on how many customers it serves. (Remember that in most states utilities have their income stream heavily regulated by the state in exchange for having a monopoly.) That change removed the incentive for utilities to actively block rooftop solar and energy-saving technology, because lost sales no longer translate to lost income. But because utilities could still make money by recouping the cost of big infrastructure projects through increases to their customers' bills, they had an incentive to build expensive stuff like power plants and big transmission hubs even if demand could be better met with efficiency and renewables.
Now, under New York's most recent reform, a utility's revenue will instead be based on how efficiently and effectively it distributes power, so-called "performance-based rates." This, finally, provides the incentive utilities need to make decisions that jibe with the state's climate goals, because it will be to their advantage to make use of distributed energy systems.
But there's a catch, one that had clean energy advocates in the state worried. If utilities were allowed to buy their own solar systems, they would be able to leverage their government-granted monopoly to muscle-out smaller companies. This could limit consumer options, drive up prices, and stifle innovation. That, in turn, could put a freeze on consumers' interest in solar and ultimately slow down the rate at which it is adopted. But if small companies are allowed in, then the energy market starts to look more like markets for normal goods, where customer choice drives technological advances and pushes down prices.
"New York's approach to limit utility ownership balances the desire for more solar with the desire to have competitive markets that we expect to continue to bring down the costs of solar," said Anne Reynolds, director of the Alliance for Clean Energy New York.
The upshot is that solar in New York will be allowed to thrive without being squeezed out by incumbent giants like Con Edison and National Grid.
"This is as exciting as the Public Service Commission gets," said Raya Salter, an attorney with the Natural Resources Defense Council in New York who worked with state regulators on the plan. "These are bold, aggressive changes."
The policy puts New York on track for a new way of doing business that many energy wonks now see as inevitable. In the past, the role of electric utilities was to generate power at a few central hubs and bring it to your house; in the near future, their role will be to facilitate the flow of power between countless independent systems.
"We need to plan for a primarily renewable system," said John Farrell, director of the Institute for Local Self-Reliance, which advocates for breaking up the old utility model as a key solution to climate change. "We want to pay [utilities] for doing things we want, rather than paying for their return on investment for the things they build."
So far, the response from utilities has been receptive; a spokesperson for Con Ed said the company looks forward to developing details for how the order will move forward.
The change in New York could become a model for other states, Reynolds said. Regulators in Hawaii are already considering a similar policy.
"Everyone is watching to see what's happening here," she said. "It's really a model of what a utility could be in the future." 

Wednesday, January 28, 2015

Our team of Solar Educators, Leigh and Janelle are gearing up for S.T.E.M. Day tomorrow at Schodack Middle School!!!


Leigh and Janelle have designed an interactive presentation that will introduce Solar Technology to Middle Schoolers at Schodack CSD. Their presentation touches base on all forms of renewable energy, and the necessity of making changes in our electricity usage to conserve our precious resources. 
For these 6th, 7th, and 8th graders, Leigh and Janelle will touch base on the photons that are used to produce a direct current of electricity, which is ultimately converted to an alternating current and used within the school.