Posts tagged: solar tribe

Westinghouse Solar: Why the Solar Tribe Should Love It

George Westinghouse (photo courtesy Greentech Media)

George Westinghouse (photo courtesy Greentech Media)

Last week I attended the American Solar Energy Society Conference in Phoenix. I had made a note to myself before arriving to visit the Andalay booth on the trade show floor. I wanted to find out how the new plug-and-play product was doing. On Thursday the exhibit floor opened and I made my way to Andalay. When I got to their booth, somebody handed me a miniature soccer ball that read “Westinghouse Solar.” Tim O’Sullivan, sales manager for the newly named Los Gatos-based company formerly known as Andalay, told me this was just being rolled out. It’s brilliant!

As Renewable Energy World, Greentech Media  and Brighter Energy point out, this is not an acquisition by Westinghouse. It is a deal to use Westinghouse’s name worldwide. I believe it has game-changer potential. If the plug-and-play product differentiation that Andalay has introduced, as well as the Lowe’s retail distribution channel had not put it’s product into the mainstream as a solid solar consumer product, the Westinghouse name most certainly will.

What a great story. Not too long ago, the word on the street was that Akeena, which had gone public through a reverse merger, had burned through its capital efforting to roll out a solar installation business. Then in September, 2007 Akeena announced partnering with Suntech to create Andalay. Behind the scenes, the company was pioneering the plug-and-play concept. In early 2009, Akeena announced an agreement with Enphase to co-develop and market the first AC solar panel. At the end of 2009 came word that Lowe’s was going begin offering the Andalay do-it-yourself solar panel. Now, Lowe’s has the Westinghouse brand.

My hat’s off to Barry Cinnamon, Akeena CEO who seems to be pushing all the right buttons, creating the opportunity for great sound bites like:

“Since George Westinghouse founded the Westinghouse Electric Corporation in 1886, the world’s electric grid has operated on AC power,” said James F. Davis, vice president, Westinghouse Electric Corp. “For over 100 years, Westinghouse has literally set the standard for reliable electric power and home appliances. We approached Akeena when our research indicated that their integrated solar-panel technology could help make solar mainstream. Akeena’s safe and reliable AC solar panels are a perfect complement with Westinghouse’s heritage. We are pleased to introduce Westinghouse Solar as the newest member of the exclusive Westinghouse family.”

Or maybe you would prefer this quote from Barry himself:

“Since the beginning, we’ve worked consistently to make solar more mainstream. We began as a rooftop installer. We then designed our own easy-to-install solar panels that gave customers superior reliability and aesthetics. We improved our design by manufacturing higher-performance AC panels, and built a dealer network that has grown to more than 25 states and Canada. We then partnered with Lowe’s Home Improvement stores for installation services, along with the first do-it-yourself solar panels stocked on retail shelves.

“Now, with the exclusive rights to the Westinghouse Solar brand, we look forward to accelerated growth without large up-front brand investments,” explained Mr Cinnamon.

The Solar Tribe should love this new development. Anything that causes solar to become more mainstream is good for the industry as whole. At one of the ASES marketing workshops I had heard that consumer focus groups had repeatedly raised as one of the barriers of broad scale adoption the question: ”why is there no Nike in solar?”  The combination of Lowes and Westinghouse can only help the industry as a whole. Too bad Home Depot is still stuck with BP Solar, but that’s another story

Plug-and-play is here to stay.

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Neil Armstrong & the Moon-We’re Missing the Point

Yesterday was the 40th anniversary of one of the most inspiring collective human achievements in history. It’s etched in our memories or, if we weren’t born yet, we all know the famous words behind this achievement: “Tranquility Base. The Eagle has landed,” and “That’s one small step for man…one giant leap for mankind.” More importantly, less than 10 years earlier, a President incredibly challenged our nation “to put a man on the moon by the end of the decade.” At the time he uttered those words, there were so many reasons that it couldn’t be done. It was impossible, but yet he made the declaration, not because it would be easy, but because it was a challenge.

And on the 40th anniversary of the accomplishment of this impossible feat, the Apollo 11 astronauts were paraded in front of the press. They were guests at the Oval Office, where President Obama praised NASA, fortunately, without getting into specifics about future plans, while at Cape Canaveral these astronauts and their colleagues complained that there should be more support and commitment to go to Mars.

Eugene Cernan, the last astronaut on the moon in 1972, told a news conference at NASA headquarters that the nation could “recapture the kind of spirit” that infused the risk-taking, cutting-edge Apollo program. “We had to accept challenges, we had to be bold, we had to take risks, we had to make sacrifices,” Cernan said.

The world’s priorities today are very different from what they were in the ’60’s, but the spirit and example set by NASA and the 30 or so astronauts like Cernan is exactly what the solar tribe should embrace today. There have been numerous blogs comparing the challenge of putting a man on the moon in the ’60’s to that of bringing our climate under control today. There have also been members of the solar tribe taking action to bring this analogy into the publics conscience. In the blog entry below this one, I have posted a letter from RePower America which plays to the same line of thinking.

The point is: we’ve done this before. Then it was “man on the moon in 10 years.” Today it’s “Reduce CO2 dramatically in 10 years.” This may not be a universally popular idea at the moment. It may not even seem possible to some. But neither was “putting a man on the moon by the end of the decade” in 1961. And for those of us who remember living through that decade, it wasn’t like everybody was a part of the daily effort. There was political will and out of that came lots of jobs and technological breakthroughs that not only made it possible for Armstrong to step onto to the lunar surface that summer of ‘69, but also changed the way a generation lived, improving the quality of life.

Together, we stand with a passion toward something even more important than “man on the moon.” Are we just going to read about it and think about and take no action? What are we waiting for? What have we got to lose? Let’s celebrate the 40th anniversary of Apollo 11 by committing to ourselves and each other to renew the same political will that made that history possible. Political will is a renewable resource and it’s up to each one of us to bring it forth.


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Posted by solaroy at 3:10 PM
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