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Our chief tech joins the Solar Instructor Training Network as an instructor

Wednesday, July 14th, 2010

 From:  http://www1.eere.energy.gov/solar/instructor_training_network.html

Solar Instructor Training Network

Photo of adults,  who are participating in a train-the-trainer event, learn more about  solar technologies. The participants are examining circuits and tools on  a table. Photovoltaic panels lean on the front of the tables. During a train-the-trainer event at the Florida Solar Energy Center, participants learn about solar technologies and developing training curricula for their communities.
Courtesy of Florida Solar Energy Center

 

The Solar Instructor Training Network promotes high-quality training in the installation of solar technologies. Nine regional resource and training providers support the professional development of trainers and instructors of solar photovoltaic (PV) and solar heating and cooling (SHC) technologies across the country.

The goals of Solar Instructor Training are to accelerate market adoption of solar technologies by ensuring that high-quality installations are standard and to create sustainable jobs within the solar installation industry.

Solar Instructor Training Network Frequently Asked Questions

These frequently asked questions (FAQs) relate to the solar instructor training network. This project was launched by the U.S. Department of Energy (DOE) Solar Energy Technologies Program (SETP or Solar Program). Go to http://www1.eere.energy.gov/solar/instructor_training_network_faq.html

Midwest Renewable Energy Fair-the worlds largest comes June 17th

Monday, May 24th, 2010

The largest energy fair in the world will be taking place in Custer, Wisconsin in the middle of June (June 17th-20). The fair is in its twenty-first year while this is our 11th year having a booth there. I (Da Energy Mon) will be doing a lecture there with Dan Alway about Living Off Grid; North & South. Dan lives off grid in Michigan and I have lived off grid for 18 years in Southern Illinois. We bring the different perspectives and challenges of living off grid in very different climates. We are actually very entertaining as we educate.

For more info on the fair go to: http://www.the-mrea.org/energy_fair.php.

For a ride from Southern Illinois call 618 893 1717

2010 Energy Fair Workshop Schedule Now Available

Are you ready to start planning your Energy Fair weekend? Hoping to squeeze in as many classes as possible?Good luck on figuring out what classes to take. There are hundreds to choose from.
Download the workshop schedule for Friday, Saturday, and Sunday HERE!

Our Booth at MREF

Record High Solar Production: Record Low Skilled Labour-Get trained

Tuesday, May 18th, 2010

 Record High Solar Production: Record Low Skilled Labour


Rock Valley College classRock Valley College class

We at AES Solar have now taught & will continue to teach Renewable Energy Design & Installation classes at three community Colleges (John A Logan in Carterville IL, Heartland’s Green Institute in Normal IL and Rock Valley Community  in Rockford IL) and at the US Penitentiary in Marion IL.

Check our calendar here for when and where our next class is.  Or let us know ( tech@AESsolar.com ) that you are interested in the classes and/or to get the textbook ahead of time to start studying now.

Article below is from  http://www.renewableenergyworld.com

Record High Solar Production: Record Low Skilled Labour

In the space of just a few years, solar energy has gone from a curiosity to a global cause as government incentives, climate change, and grassroots activism have all helped drive greater demand for photovoltaic manufacturing and solar installation.  According to Greg Sheppard, Chief Research Office at market research firm, iSupply, “Solar panel makers now are running their factories at 90% of capacity, straining their capability to meet demand.”

However, many believe that future demand could be threatened much sooner if certain countries continue facing severe labour shortages at various stages of the solar value chain.  In Canada, for example, a recent report by CanSIA indicates that the country’s solar industry faces a worrying dearth of qualified experts to help meet tomorrow’s demand.  According to the 2009 CanSIA study, more than half of the solar companies surveyed expect labour shortages by 2012, with PV installation topping the list of critical skills in short supply.

To understand how a shortage like Canada’s could spell doom for the industry, consider the current state of affairs - already, the global solar energy market is a $39 billion industry, with some forecasts pegging the industry at $77 billion by 2015.  With current trends, global solar installations could top 13.6 gigawatts (GW) by the end of this year - nearly double what it was in 2009 (7.3 GW).

However, such scenarios are only likely to play out if qualified installers and technicians exist to make the above materialize.  With billions in private equity floating around and manufacturing capacity approaching 100%, it is obvious that investors and producers remain optimistic about the industry’s growth.  But will this demand continue in the absence of certified experts who can actually “install” the technology on a massive scale?

This remains to be seen.  However, the rise of solar training courses and electrical safety schools suggests a concerted and deliberate effort to boost capacity at the tail end of the solar value chain.  In Canada, for example, Ontario Solar Academy has introduced a suite of training courses using codes and guidelines specific to the province - a move that clearly signals growing awareness of Canada’s impending labour bottleneck.  According to David Gower, Associate Director of Solar Academy, “the demand is there.  The technology is there.  Our goal is to ensure that the skill is there as well.”

As the world continues to watch developments unfold in Canada, Germany, and the handful of other solar hotspots, the solution to the industry’s potential labour bottlenecks could actually come from the unlikeliest of sources.  Perhaps a blessing of sorts, the current economic crisis has prompted (in some cases, forced) many to rethink their career paths.  Unemployment is rarely a welcomed phenomenon, but at a time when entire countries are facing industry-wide labour shortages, perhaps the labour-unemployment disequilibrium will be short-lived as more people join the solar movement.