WASHINGTON
– The White House began installing solar panels this week on the first family’s residence, finally
making good on a pledge President Obama made almost three years ago.
The
installation follows a speech Obama made in June on tackling the causes of
climate change and dealing with its effects. Administration officials announced
in October 2010 that solar panels would be installed in the White House as part
of an initiative to make government buildings more energy efficient, but the
work was repeatedly delayed.
Environmentalists
and solar energy companies welcomed the news.
“Solar is
fast becoming America’s most popular home improvement, and we are very pleased
to see the first family follow the American people’s lead. Support for solar
energy is one issue that rises above the political fray,” said a statement from
Sungevity, an Oakland-based solar company.
Sungevity
was part of a coalition of solar businesses and environmental groups that
petitioned the administration in early 2010 to bring back solar power to the
White House. President Carter had solar
panels installed there, but President Reagan had them taken down in 1986.
When the
project was announced in 2010, Nancy Sutley, chairwoman of the White House
Council on Environmental Quality, said it would show that “American solar
technologies are available, reliable, and ready for installation in homes
throughout the country.”
Renewable
sources generate only a small portion of the country’s electricity, but their
share has grown. The United States installed 723 megawatts of solar energy in
the first quarter of 2013, which accounted for more than 48% of all new
electric generation capacity built over that period, according to the Solar
Energy Industries Assn., a Washington trade group.
The White
House said the project would “help demonstrate that historic buildings can
incorporate solar energy and energy-efficiency upgrades.”
The
administration said the solar equipment is “American-made,” but declined to
give any other details, including the cost, the name of the vendor, how much
energy it will save or when it will come on line.
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