Intersolar North America Honors Governor Edmund G. Brown Jr. with First-Ever Champion of Change Lifetime Achievement Award

Intersolar and ees North America, the premier solar and energy storage events, will award California Gov. Edmund G. Brown Jr. with the first-ever Intersolar Champion of Change Lifetime Achievement AWARD.

Each year, Intersolar recognizes an individuals’ commitment to supporting the development of renewable energy with the Champion of Change AWARD, hosted in partnership with the California Solar and Storage Association (CALSSA). The Lifetime Achievement AWARD honors pioneers in clean technology and their outstanding accomplishments in advancing the adoption of renewable energy.

“California’s solar industry owes a debt of gratitude to Governor Brown for his decades of support,” said Bernadette del Chiaro, executive director of CALSSA. “It was his original vision and early acceptance of solar energy as a mainstream source of energy that set the wheels of industry in motion decades ago, and still generate change today. Governor Brown has never stopped pushing for progress and change. Somehow he understands better than most public leaders that progress begets progress and that change happens one solar roof, one solar school, one solar farm at a time.”

For nearly five decades, Gov. Brown has dedicated his efforts toward building an emission-free future by enforcing sustainable policies within the state of California while also contributing to national and international green initiatives. Under his leadership, California has solidified its position as a global leader in solar and clean energy, being home to one third of the country’s solar workforce and the largest solar market within the U.S. Gov. Brown appeared at Intersolar North America as a keynote speaker in San Francisco, and promoted the economic and environmental benefits role solar and renewable energy technologies offer.

Gov. Brown’s commitment to solar dates back to the mid-1970s and early-1980s during his first term in office as the Governor of California, where he halted the expansion of nuclear power and promoted renewable energy. Now about to end his fourth term, Gov. Brown has been a policy trailblazer for the solar industry. In 2015, Gov. Brown signed a mandate for 50 percent renewables by 2030 inspiring many states like New York and New Jersey to follow suit.

More recently, the governor formed the U.S. Climate Alliance with state governors across the country, in response to President Trump’s decision to withdraw from the Paris Climate Agreement, to further battle the effects of climate change and drive the United States’ sustainability efforts. Expanding to the international level, Gov. Brown co-founded the Under2Coalition, a global commitment to combating climate change and represents more than 1.3 billion people in GDP, 17 percent of the global population. And this year, under the governor’s leadership, California adopted the nation’s first policy requiring all new residential construction in the state to have solar installed starting in 2020.

“California has long led the United States, and the world, in solar energy innovation and adoption, due in no small part to the forward-thinking policies of Gov. Brown,” said Florian Wessendorf and Daniel Strowitzki, managing directors of Intersolar North America. “We are thrilled we’ve been able to work closely with Gov. Brown and his administration over the years, and have found his comments on the industry and his actions and progressive policies inspiring. There is no one more deserving of Intersolar’s first-ever Champion of Change Lifetime Achievement AWARD.”

By honoring individuals such as Gov. Brown, Intersolar and ees North America, as well as its partners, shine a light on those helping drive new energy technologies forward, and underscores the events’ commitment to supporting the solar economy in California and beyond. For more than a decade, event organizers have worked closely with organizations such as CALSSA, NAATBatt and NorCal Solar to help advocate for programs and policies important to the solar and storage industries and have also offered financial support. Off-site networking events, such as CALSSA’s annual Summerfest, serve as important fundraisers for the organizations. All proceeds from Summerfest go directly toward CALSSA. In 2017, CALSSA raised nearly $500,000 from all activities at Intersolar North America.

Registration to Intersolar and ees North America’s exhibition and conference is available online. Members of the press can now apply for a media pass here. Tickets for Summerfest, as well as other networking activities including a San Francisco Bay Sailing Tour, trip to solar installations in Wine Country, and a tour of notable solar projects in San Francisco are available for purchase. All attendees are able to attend the Opening Ceremony and Champion of Change AWARD Ceremony on Tuesday, July 10 at 8:30 a.m., which will feature keynote speakers Tony Seba, author and Silicon Valley entrepreneur, and Elaine Ulrich, Ph.D. Senior Advisor U.S. Department of Energy. Information on all AWARDs can be found here.

Will We All End Up Working For SunPower?: Module Company Launches Battery Partnership With sonnen

SunPower

By Frank Andorka, Senior Correspondent

SunPower is proving that you can be everything to everybody without trying to be the expert in everything yourself – a business model that could bode well for the company’s future as the U.S. solar industry continues to grow.

First, it purchased mid-tier module maker SolarWorld and announced plans to take over its Oregon manufacturing facility to broaden the scope of its module products. Tuesday, it announced it was selling its microinverter line to industry powerhouse Enphase and converting its AC module line to Enphase inverters instead of continuing to manufacture the products themselves. Which brings us to yesterday and the partnership with energy storage giant sonnen.

“SunPower is the solar industry’s gold standard for superior solar products and services which fits perfectly with sonnen’s leadership in developing intelligent and high performing residential energy storage systems,” said Blake Richetta, Senior Vice President and head of sonnen’s U.S. division, in a press release. “This new program is an ideal marriage between two innovative companies who possess a similar vision to provide premium technology that leads us to a clean and reliable energy future. We are eager to integrate our products and systems with Equinox and offer a premier and comprehensive solution for the growing solar + storage marketplace.”

As with the Enphase partnership, the new sonnen program centers around pairing the company’s energy storage offering with SunPower’s Equinox home solar energy systems. And, much like the deal with Enphase, it’s a partnership that benefits both parties.

SunPower dealers can now offer their customers a full system, from modules to inverters to storage, with no fuss and no muss. sonnen gets U.S. exposure and a built-in distribution system through SunPower’s integrated solar installers’ list.

Quietly, without much fanfare and almost in the background, SunPower is assembling a team that could position it to be the country’s leading solar company before long.

Somewhere, SunPower CEO Tom Werner is smiling.

FERC Commissioners Tell Senate: Coal, Nuke Bailout Unnecessary

FERC

By Frank Andorka, Senior Correspondent

Yesterday, the Federal Energy Regulatory Commission (FERC) commissioners appeared before the Senate Committee on Energy and Natural Resources and told the Senators what the rest of the world already knows: Water is wet. The Pope is still Catholic. And the nuclear and coal plant bailout Trump demanded is entirely unnecessary.

While the solar industry has been saying this since Trump first floated this Bob Murray special two years ago, Energy Law 360 reports that when asked if the bailout of failing nuclear and coal plants was important to national security, the crickets could be heard loud and clear from out on the National Mall. We’ll let Energy Law 360 set the stage:

“Do any of you believe that in the wholesale power markets, we’re facing an actual national security emergency at the moment?” Sen. Martin Heinrich, D-N.M., asked the FERC commissioners.

Democratic Commissioner Cheryl LaFleur answered first.

“I do not, Senator,” LaFleur said. “I think the markets are reliable.”

“Anyone willing to answer that with a yes?” Heinrich then asked.

No other FERC commissioner responded.

Like we said, crickets.

It has long been policy of this president to try to prop up failing nuclear and coal plants by any means necessary. It was what was behind the study Secretary of Energy Rick Perry ordered shortly after his appointment into the importance of “baseload power” and the completely arbitrary idea that electrical generation facilities must have 90 days of reserve power on site.

The study was expected to find that an increase in coal and nuclear plants were necessary. When it didn’t, Perry ordered the Federal Energy Regulatory Commission to issue a rule that would have provided for bailouts of failing nuclear and coal plants. FERC respectfully declined.

Which is why the ball has landed back in the Department of Energy’s court, and they appear to be on the verge of simply ordering grid operators to buy power from these plants to provide the plant operators with a financial bailout orchestrated by the federal government.

It’s no shock that this action is coming. After all, it was President Trump who stood in front of West Virginia coal miners and offered them the impossible dream of bringing coal jobs back to the United States, despite the electricity market – including a majority of utilities – voting against such a move with their market-based plans to close the plants instead. To fulfill his campaign promise, the only way to save those jobs is to rig the system in favor of coal plants.

More:

FERC Commissioners Deny Necessity Of Coal, Nuke Bailout

Trump Throws Free Market Principles Out Window On Behalf Of Coal, Nuke Plants

Enphase To Purchase SunPower Microinverter Business

Enphase

By Frank Andorka, Senior Correspondent

After the stock market closed, Enphase Energy – the once-struggling microinverter company that is seeing a resurgence under CEO Badri Kothandaraman, announced it was buying SunPower’s microinverter business for $25 million and 7.5 million shares of common stock.

Enphase stock rose 16% after the announcement.

The transaction means Enphase will now supply the microinverter technology for SunPower’s AC modules instead of SunPower producing the microinverters on their own. Tom Werner, SunPower CEO, tipped his hand about why the transaction took place in the release. He said the transaction will allow SunPower to “continue containing costs, leveraging R&D support and helping streamline our business priorities.” In other words, it will allow SunPower to focus all its energies on building modules instead of ancillary arms of the solar business.

The announcement comes weeks after SunPower announced it would purchase down-market rival SolarWorld and begin manufacturing more modules in the United States. Shedding the microninverter line is in keeping with a business strategy focused on building and expanding the company’s module lines both in the upscale and middle-tier residential markets.

On Enphase’s side of the ledger, the transaction provides a boost to a company clawing its way back to relevance after nearly two years of wandering in the darkness and falling under SolarEdge’s shadow. Starting in September, however, Enphase has racked up an impressive number of victories.

First, it posted profits for the first time in two years in Q4 and showed continued stability in the Q1 2018. It also signed an exclusive deal with Panasonic to provide microinverters to its AC modules, won a a court battle with SolarEdge over an ad and now the deal with SunPower. It’s unclear at press time what effect, if any, the SunPower deal will have on its agreement with Panasonic.

Taking a victory lap Kothandaraman said in Enphase’s release on the subject:

We are pleased to become the microinverter supplier for SunPower’s AC Modules. The IQ 7XS 320W AC microinverter in an ACM strongly complements SunPower’s high efficiency solar cells, communication and racking to create a high performance, high quality and easy-to-use Equinox™ Home Solar System, providing exceptional value to homeowners, dealers and architects.

Does this mean the microinverter battles at the industry’s two largest trade shows are over? No – in fact it may mean they are finally going to begin in earnest.