Q2 Sentiment Survey. The second quarter sentiment survey is up and running. Please take 30 seconds and answer these 5 questions and tell us how you feel. This is a survey for individuals so it doesn’t matter what role you play in solar. We will release the results at SolarWakeup Live! Chicago on June 21st, you should have your ticket already!
Residential Advisory Council. Last call for residential installers to join the SolarWakeup residential solar market advisory council. We’ve got a couple of dozen involved already and will be engaging this group to learn more about the most important segment of the solar industry. If you’re interested in being involved, which will be worth your time and insights, please send me an email.
The List Of 201 Impacts. Last week we changed the format of our original reporting. Our hopes is to shift into a format that is less about telling you how we feel about the news, which I will continue to do in this portion, but give you greater detail about the news that matter to the industry. In this report we went deeper into the impact of 201 for Cypress Creek, which gave us more detail about their project cancellations. We knew that any 201 tariff would result in job losses, and the most important job losses are the jobs not created. If you live in one of these 11 States, contact your Senator and tell him about the lost opportunity.
Not A Spectator Sport. Michigan is not the biggest solar market but it can be. As an aside, Michigan was on track to be the hub of solar manufacturing in the US thanks to the leadership of Governor Granholm. After a great attempt by Vote Solar and others to stop a natural gas plant in favor of more renewables, Tom Steyer also pushed a separate RPS initiative in the State. DTE announced late on Friday that they are increasing and pushing up their RPS goal to 50% by 2030, with a personal note to Steyer in the press release. While a victory, I wonder who may not have wanted the RPS ballot question on the ballot during a gubernatorial election?
Corporate Energy Executives. I like the idea of energy executives within corporations getting some spotlight in the boardroom. You already see this within big tech companies but how about the rest of the top corporations? When 70% of customers (according to Deloitte) want to know companies are doing more renewable energy, you’ve got to think that the CEO is looking around the room and wondering what the plan is. How do we elevate these executives? Anyone here do this for a living and want to explain the internal work you do to get projects done to the audience at SolarWakeup Live! Chicago? I would love to have you.
I Want This. In case you missed it, Meghan and Harry left for the post-nuptial celebration in an awesome 1968 Jaguar. The best part? It was converted to electric. Here its he official Kensington Palace video.
- SolarWakeup: 11 States To Feel Sting Of Cypress Creek Retrenchment
- SolarWakeup: Trump Tweet Commends “Clean Coal” Even As DTE Energy Continues To Shut Down Coal Plants
- GreenBiz: How managers can become sustainability rockstars of the 21st century
- Renewable Energy World: To Save Coal Jobs, Trump Should Train Coal Workers to Perform Energy Audits, Install Solar and Maintain Wind Farms
- Grist: Bitcoin’s energy use got studied, and you libertarian nerds look even worse than usual
- SolarWakeup: New Marketing E-Book Targets Clean Energy Companies
- Bloomberg: Storage Will Be Energy’s Next Big Thing
- Greentech Media: Puerto Rico’s Latest Challenge – Utility Curtailment of Wind and Solar Farms
Opinion
Have a great day!
Yann