Long Branch Couple Goes Solar
VINCE MILLER, Staff
Writer [Asbury
Park Press] Marcia Blackwell has been told that for
every home that uses solar energy, you can take two gas-burning
automobiles
off the road.
Well, Long Branch streets may be minus two cars these days. Mayor
Adam Schneider was on hand May 17 to congratulate Tom
and Marcia Blackwell
on being the first
home in Long Branch to turn
to solar energy for generating electricity for all home appliances
except heat. The home is heated by natural gas. "Every inspector
who checked out the solar panels and meter told us our house is
the first in Long Branch to switch to solar," Marcia Blackwell
said. The Blackwells said they are environmentally conscious and learned
more about the cost-saving benefits of solar energy by attending
energy conventions and reading literature. But it was the 70 percent
rebate offered by the New Jersey Board of Public Utilities that
convinced them to take solar. "The cost to install the 30 silicone-based roof panels was
$38,000," Marcia Blackwell said. "With the rebate, we
paid $11,000." Thomas E. Matulewicz of GeoGenix in Rumson
said his firm installed the panels in about a week. "I told them my mother was coming down for Mother's Day to
watch the meter spin backward, and we had to have them installed
by then," Marcia Blackwell quipped. "They heard me." She
was referring to the fact that when power is given back to the
electric company, the meter will spin in reverse. In a piece of promotional literature, GeoGenix stated a homeowner's
property value will increase $20 for every $1 saved on electrical
energy. Blackwell
said the solar energy generates electricity and pumps it
out to a grid. "At the end of the year, Jersey Central Power and Light Co. will
tabulate how much we've used and how much we've generated," she
said. "They will either send us a check for the amount we
generated over what we used, or a bill for the amount we've used
over what we generated. "They will pay us as a wholesaler
because we are an independent electric generator," she said. "If
we've used more than we've generated, they'll bill us as they
would a retail user." Solar
energy generates electricity for all appliances in the Blackwell
home. "We don't have air conditioning," she said. "If
we choose to install air conditioning, we can apply for another
rebate from
the BPU." The
Blackwells have lived on Liberty Street for the past four
years. The panels
have a 25-year warranty. "They'll last at
least 30," Marcia Blackwell said. Looking
at the panels, Schneider said, "It just seems like
such a good idea. It makes a lot of sense." The Blackwells
were to attend the workshop meeting of the Long Branch City Council
yesterday to describe their experiences with solar energy. |