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Solar in the Southeast

You don’t have to live in the Mojave Desert of Arizona, to generate electricity and hot water from the sun.
 
Photovoltaic Solar Radiation - United States
Credit: National Renewable Energy Laboratory. Link to larger image
 
Annual Average Daily Peak Sun Hours - United States
Credit: US Department of Energy
As the maps illustrate, the Southeast receives an average of 4.5 to 4.7 hours of peak sun daily. In addition, the solar energy intensity received in most of the Southeast U.S. is only about 15 percent less than that received in the sunny Southwest.
 

Numerous solar projects in the Southeast have been great successes.

Local incentives are often more important than geographical climate in determining the economic feasibility of a solar system. State incentives and renewable energy policies can shorten system payback times remarkably. In California, for example, the cost of solar electric systems is often cut in half through local incentives and utilities that buy solar power at a premium.

While the state of Georgia has no tax-credit incentives for solar thermal or photovoltaics, it does offer net-metering, whereby someone with a solar array can sell their power back into the electricity grid. Other states in the Southeast do have sizable incentives for installing solar.

These states include:

Virginia
North Carolina
Florida
Consult the residential and commercial pages of this website to learn more about incentives.
Residential Solar
Commercial Solar
For a comprehensive incentives list go to the Database of State Incentives for Renewable Energy’s website, dsireusa.org
The Southeast boasts some of the best solar resources in the country including the Florida Solar Energy Center, the North Carolina Solar Center, and Southface in Atlanta.

 

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