Orange County NC Website
Thursday, January 29, 2015 <br />The Best Idea in a Long Time: Covering Parking Lots with Solar Panels <br />Parking lot featuring solar power panels to shade cars and provide power. <br />America is a nation of pavement. According to research conducted by the Lawrence Berkeley <br />National Laboratory, most cities' surfaces are 35 to 50 percent composed of the stuff. And 40 <br />percent of that pavement is parking lots. That has a large effect: Asphalt and concrete absorb the <br />sun's energy, retaining heat — and contributing to the "urban heat island effect," in which cities <br />are hotter than the surrounding areas. <br />So what if there were a way to cut down on that heat, cool down the cars that park in these lots, power up <br />those parked cars that are electric vehicles (like Teslas), and generate a lot of energy to boot? It sounds <br />great, and there is actually a technology that does all of this — solar carports. <br />It's just what it sounds like — covering up a parking lot with solar panels, which are elevated <br />above the ground so that cars park in the shade beneath a canopy of photovoltaics. Depending of <br />course on the size of the array, you can generate a lot of power. For instance, one vast solar <br />carport installation at Rutgers University is 28 acres in size and produces 8 megawatts of power, <br />or about enough energy to power 1,000 homes. <br />Solar carports have many benefits, ranging from aesthetics (yes, the things look very cool) to <br />subtler factors. Like this: Not having to return to a hot car after spending three hours at the mall <br />or a sporting event in the summer. In fact, according to the Environmental Protection Agency <br />and Department of Energy, being able to park in the shade in the summer is actually a <br />substantial contributor to increased vehicle fuel efficiency, because it saves having to cool your <br />car back up by cranking the air conditioner. <br />