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San Francisco launches Moscone Center Solar Project
The city unveils the first of several projects intended to ease
reliance on fossil fuels for electricity.
source: John
M. Glionna LA TIMES 2002.11.22
SAN FRANCISCO -- This famously foggy city, home to cold, cloudy
and often capricious weather, now wants to lighten its image to
something decidedly sunlit: as the nation's leading municipal producer
of solar power and renewable energy.
On an unseasonably bright Thursday, Mayor Willie Brown unveiled
what officials hope will be the first of several solar power refurbishment
projects to make the city less reliant on aging fossil fuel-burning
generators.
Capitalizing on a $100-million public solar power bond issue passed
by voters in 2001, officials soon will begin installing thousands
of photovoltaic panels atop the Moscone Convention Center.
The $5.2-million project, which includes a retrofit of existing
power and heating systems, is expected to save the city $200,000
in energy costs and enough power annually to generate electricity
for more than 1,000 homes.
Claiming that such solar power conversions eventually will pay
for themselves, officials hope to set an energy-saving standard
for other cities nationwide.
"San Francisco voters have spoken," Brown said of last
year's bond measure, which passed by an overwhelming 73%. "They
want cleaner, greener sources of energy that reduce our reliance
on polluting power generated out of the area."
Brown said officials have heard from 15 cities -- including San
Diego, Denver and New York -- that may seek to emulate San Francisco's
precedent of publicly funding a transition to renewable energy,
which eventually could bring down the cost of solar power.
Singer Bonnie Raitt -- a longtime advocate of renewable energy
-- drew raucous applause from a crowd of about 200 when she described
the solar power movement as a foreign policy alternative to waging
war in oil-producing regions of the world.
"Solar power is the most patriotic act we can commit,"
the singer said in her signature raspy voice. "It makes our
country less dependent on foreign oil and less likely to go to war."
Referring to last year's statewide energy crisis, Raitt called
the solar project an insurance policy so that "no gas or power
company can ever hold our state for ransom ever again."
Supervisor Tom Ammiano likened the solar power push to a song in
the movie "The Wizard of Oz."
"San Francisco is often referred to as Oz," Ammiano said.
"The movie includes a little ditty that goes, 'Step out of
the woods, step out of the dark and into the light.' Well, San Francisco
has stepped out into the light on its journey down the yellow brick
road."
Ed Smeloff, assistant general manager for power policy at the city's
Public Utilities Commission, said solar power and San Francisco
are not incompatible concepts.
"There's this misconception that we're all fog," he told
the City Hall gathering. "We need to recast San Francisco from
the foggy city to the sunny city."
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