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Solar Energy System Planned for
Lake Placid High School
Contact:
Stephen Shoenholz
914-390-8165
stephen.shoenholz@nypa.gov
March 26, 2007
FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE
LAKE PLACID—Energy from the sun will be providing
some of Lake Placid High School’s electricity, thanks to a
cooperative effort involving the New York Power Authority (NYPA),
the New York State Energy Research and Development Authority (NYSERDA)
and the Lake Placid municipal electric system.
Officials announced Monday that a 1.4-kilowatt (kw)
solar photovoltaic system is scheduled to be installed this summer
at the school. In addition to supplying clean, economical power,
the unit will give students a firsthand look at a renewable energy
source and will complement classroom instruction.
Similar projects are planned for schools served by
the Arcade municipal system in Wyoming County and the Solvay
municipal system in Onondaga County. The work will be funded in
part through grants from NYSERDA as a result of the settlement of a
lawsuit by the New York State Office of the Attorney General against
the Ohio Edison Co. last year. The Independent Energy Efficiency
Program (IEEP), established by more than 20 of the state’s municipal
systems to carry out energy efficiency programs in their service
areas, will coordinate the projects.
“The Power Authority is pleased to be part of this
initiative, which will meet important energy, environmental and
educational needs,” said Timothy S. Carey, NYPA’s president and
chief executive officer. “Increased use of solar power can help to
reduce our dependence on foreign oil and the threat of global
warming. Learning about this and other energy options will enable
today’s students to contribute to informed decision-making in the
future.”
NYSERDA President Peter R. Smith said, “The School
Power…NaturallySM program has been a successful tool in educating
New Yorkers about energy, particularly the potential of solar energy
to power our homes, schools and workplaces. Partnering with NYPA,
we’re able to expand this program into three schools where students
and local residents can see firsthand the benefits of a solar energy
system.”
Lake Placid Mayor Jamie Rogers said, “The solar
project builds on the village’s strong commitment to energy
efficiency and environmental protection. It will meet a small
percentage of the school’s electricity needs, but its value as an
educational resource for our students and the residents of Lake
Placid will go well beyond that. We must encourage the development
of clean, renewable energy sources, and projects like this are
essential to meeting that goal.”
“We welcome our partnership with NYSERDA and NYPA,”
said William Barry, a representative of the IEEP, which was
established in 2001. “It will give added impetus to our efforts to
bring economic, environmental and operational benefits to our
municipal-system members by creating new opportunities to save
energy and use clean new technologies.”
In each of the three municipal systems, the Power
Authority will provide technical assistance and will oversee the
projects to ensure that they meet the objectives of a landmark 2003
agreement that, among other provisions, called for increased
cooperation between NYPA and the state’s 51 municipal electric
systems and rural cooperatives in promoting energy
efficiency.
NYPA meets the bulk of these systems’ electricity
needs with low-cost hydroelectric power from its Niagara Power
Project near Niagara Falls.
The new projects are among the first to benefit
from Power Authority approval last May of municipal system and
cooperative participation in the Authority’s statewide Energy
Services Program, covering energy efficiency and clean-energy
initiatives. They are also in line with NYPA’s Power to Schools
program, which provides for the Authority to work with public and
private schools throughout the state to advance energy efficiency
and clean technologies.
Funding of $8,400 is being negotiated with NYSERDA
for Lake Placid High School. The total cost is $35,370, with
additional financing coming through the IEEP. These financing costs
will be recovered through a small charge (one-tenth of a cent per
kilowatt hour) on Lake Placid customer bills.
The schools will use curricular materials, lesson
plans and background information that were developed under NYSERDA’s
School Power…NaturallySM program and are available to all teachers
at
www.SchoolPowerNaturally.org. These materials help students
learn about solar energy in a creative, interactive manner, and each
activity lists the New York State educational standards it
addresses. IEEP will provide the schools with instrumentation and
software to permit ongoing computerized monitoring of each solar
project’s performance.
Energy-saving features already in place at Lake
Placid High School include efficient T-8 lamps and lighting
controls. The school also has a 300-kw standby generator that
operates at times of greatest electricity use, easing demand for
power from the heavily used transmission system.
In line with the Tri-Lakes Reliability Project,
which includes construction of a new 46-kilovolt power line to serve
the region, the Lake Placid municipal system is working with NYPA to
promote energy efficiency through such measures as installation of
efficient refrigerators in public housing units. The municipal
system has also completed various energy efficiency projects through
the IEEP.
Triangle Electrical Systems, Inc. of Plattsburgh
will install the solar project at the high school.
Solar photovoltaic systems include panels of
semiconductor solar cells that convert sunlight directly into
electricity, as well as inverters that change the electricity from
direct current to the alternating current required for conventional
use.
About NYPA:
■ NYPA uses no tax money or
state credit. It finances its operations through the sale of
bonds and revenues earned in large part through sales of
electricity. ■ NYPA is a leader in promoting
energy-efficiency, new energy technologies and electric
transportation initiatives. ■ It is the
nation’s largest state-owned electric utility, with 18 generating
facilities in various parts of the state and more than 1,400
circuit-miles of transmission lines.
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