Thứ Năm, 23 tháng 4, 2020

This is your SolarWakeup for April 23rd, 2020

Creating Shared Experiences. Solar advocate, Alex McDonough, joins in an editorial about the need to fight climate change. Flattening the curve is a term that 6 weeks ago meant nothing to most and living the life of a less habitable planet was a figment of an unreachable imagination. Now that our living situation has surpassed the wildest Hollywood script, can we learn and prevent the climate crisis collision course we are steaming towards.

UN Has A Thought. On the 50th anniversary of Earth Day the UN is calling for an economic recovery rooted in environmental benefits. Similarly to the statement by Tom Steyer I covered yesterday, the opportunity to build new jobs in building an expanded climate positive economy.

Let’s Build, Smartly.  Marc Andreesen has been quieter when it comes to his digital footprint. As the author of ‘Software will eat the world’ and perhaps the father of tweet threads, when Marc writes it gets talked about. In his article ‘It’s time to build’ he makes the case that we do too little thinking and even less doing when it comes to the big issues facing our Country. I agree with his general thesis and note that the reason may not be doing these things is that capitalism doesn’t reward that kind of execution.

Take The Helm. “The CPUC will closely monitor the selection of PG&E’s next CEO” is the comment that caps the news that PG&E’s Bill Johnson, formerly of the TVA as the highest paid federal employee and formerly of Progress Energy Florida, is leaving this summer. I definitely have some hopes and recommendations for PG&E’s shareholders on how to maximize their value. Here’s the thing, Nextera beat expectations and is going to invest billions on solar and storage and their Governor doesn’t even really care. In California, Governor Newsom not only cares, the legislature has passed policy saying that the goal is 100% renewable energy. Imagine being able to do good, follow policy and maximize shareholder value at the same time.

What Is Climate tech? Alternative energy, renewable energy, clean tech and now climate tech. What does that mean and “what’s in a name? That which we call a rose By any other name would smell as sweet.” That’s the real trick here, I’ve been in solar for 15 years and some of you much longer and it’s always been a market that generally moves up and to the right even as punches and bruises happen along the way. Climate tech has the ability to make the smell a rose because when it comes to free market capitalism, the hope for enormous return requires sentiment on our side. Climate tech is the name today for what we already know but this time everyone wants to get on the train.

Get Involved. Yesterday, many of you started to get involved and some reached out to learn more. The solar module index is exactly what the name says, you (the installer) will share confidentially information about what you’re paying and in return get to see (without names) what everyone else is. It’s like buying an airline ticket online, you have information to make better decisions. I expect that the free slots in the index will run out today so if you’re interested, head to the survey or get more info on the website. 

Opinion

Best, Yann

The post This is your SolarWakeup for April 23rd, 2020 appeared first on SolarWakeup.com.


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