Information
for this article was provided by General Motors Corp. and United Solar Ovonic
(www.uni-solar.com).
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The solar panels keep costs down and reduce the
facility’s environmental impact. Solar energy not consumed is fed
back into the California power grid, helping thousands of Californian’s power
their own homes. GM has reduced its energy consumption in North America by 25
percent over the past five years as a result of its commitment to conservation
and renewable energy sources. (Photo copyright 2007, General Motors and Wieck
Photo Database.) |
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Renewable energy sources, such as solar, play a
major conservation role for General
Motors. This role was evidenced
when, in the fall of 2006, GM installed over 1 MW of UNI-SOLAR PV laminates at one of its
California facilities.
The Service Parts Operations Parts
Distribution Center in Rancho Cucamonga, California, is among the nation’s
largest corporate solar photovoltaic installations. UNI-SOLAR laminates
installed on the roof help keep costs down and reduce the facility’s
environmental impact.
The solar laminates power the warehouse from
morning until night where 215 employees ship nearly 76,000 customers’ orders to
GM car dealerships across California and Arizona. Using solar laminates to
power 50 percent of its operations enables the facility to save 10 percent of
its electricity costs each year. Solar energy not consumed will feed back into
the California power grid, helping thousands of Californian’s power their own
homes.
The installation was part of an overall program that has
enabled GM to reduce its energy from 94 trillion BTU in 2002, to 72.5 trillion
BTU by the end of 2006 in GM’s North American region. GM, already one of the
leading users of renewable energy in the North American manufacturing sector,
has renewable energy resources representing about 2 percent of its energy
usage.
“General Motors has a corporate commitment to making our vehicles
and our facilities energy efficient, and we have a long history of energy
reduction efforts at our plants,” said Elizabeth Lowery, GM vice president,
Environmental Energy.