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"Shell Oil predicts that 50% of the world's energy will come from renewable sources by 2040."

"A system as small as 50 kilowatts, which can fit on a medium-sized office building roof, can produce enough electricity to eliminate 86,388 lbs of CO2 pollution annually, equivalent to planting over 6.5 acres of trees!"

"The number 2 state in the U.S. for solar electric power, and number 1 in total solar installations on a per capita basis, is New Jersey. Abundant state and federal incentive programs have caused the number of solar installations to skyrocket from just six installations seven years ago to over 4,340 today." LEARN MORE

In one hour, the planet Earth receives more energy from the sun than the entire world uses during a whole year.

In most states, you are allowed to feed the electricity produced by your solar power system back into the power grid.

Known as "net metering," this allows you to sell your solar power to the local utility, reducing or eliminating your electric bill.

The American Recovery and Reinvestment Act of 2009 (ARRA), passed in response to the worldwide economic crisis of 2008-2009, contains more than than $50 billion in direct spending programs, tax incentives, grants, loans, loan guarantees, and bond programs devoted to clean and renewable energy.

Even during the recession, the solar industry grew by 37 percent in 2009 and created 17,000 new American jobs. One industry association projects 10 gigawatts of new installations annually by 2015, powering two million households with clean, safe solar energy and supporting 440,000 domestic jobs.

2009 marked the second year of major price declines for photovoltaic solar modules. Prices have fallen over 40 percent since the beginning of 2008.

Since module prices account for up to half of the installed cost of a PV system, overall installed system prices are trending significantly downward as well.

How Does It Work?

Grid-connected solar and wind generating systems don't require choosing between renewable electricity and the utility.

Solar & wind generating systems work in parallel to the grid, providing the best possible combination of reliability, pricing and sustainability benefits. A properly designed and installed solar generating system works seamlessly with existing building systems, resulting in zero impact to building operation, maintenance and performance.

Component Function
Solar Array or Wind Turbine Converts sunlight or wind into electricity.
Inverter Converts the direct current electricity from the solar or wind installation to utility-grade alternating current that is perfectly synchronized with the utility grid.
Meter Your solar or wind installation will have a separate meter that measures system output, transmitting performance data to Neuwing Renewable Energy's offices for remote monitoring and billing.
Electrical Distribution Occurs via the building's existing electric panel with no additional equipment required.
Utility Grid Supplies electricity when the building load exceeds the solar or wind generating system's output and absorbs exported electricity when the system output exceeds building load.
Building Electrical Loads Are fed from both the solar generating system and the utility grid, seamlessly and transparently.