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Why Solar Power

Solar energy is an abundant resource.

  • Each minute enough sunlight reaches the Earth's surface to meet the world's energy demand for an entire year.
    You can use clean electricity from photovoltaic panels on your home or business to replace power produced by coal, oil, and nuclear power plants.
  • A solar power system ties into your current utility connection, turning your electric meter backwards when the sun shines.
  • Photovoltaic technology is proven, reliable, and has no moving parts.
  • A solar power system on your home or business demonstrates your commitment to clean, renewable energy.

Over its 35-year expected life, a 10 kW system will provide the equivalent CO2 reduction as planting 1450 trees. (Based on typical utility pollution, it will prevent emissions of 963,125 lbs of carbon dioxide, 4,237 lbs of sulfur dioxide, and 1,364 lbs of nitrogen oxides.) It will produce 575,000 kilowatt hours of electricity, as much as would be generated by burning 583,000 lbs of coal.

At Solar Market, we believe that business should add value to the environment and society as well as the economy.
We are committed to creating value by balancing nature, humanity, and technology.

We also believe that the best way to succeed in this mission is to provide our customers with solutions that fit their needs

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Why International Agency In Solar Market
  • Lower price than market.
  • Encourage refund policy.
  • All-sided sales technical service and All-round technic training.
  • Market scope protect.
  • Solve customers After Sell Service worry
  • Letter of Authorization to International Agent.
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Solar Market Worldwide by 2011

According to a solar overview from JP Morgan, the U.S. market will reach 1.6 gigawatts in 2011, compared with a market of 1.35 gigawatts in Germany in 2012. The research firm also expects Greece, South Korea and Italy to grow quickly.

The U.S. will overtake Germany as the largest solar market in 2011, a recent JP Morgan report suggests.

According to a chart in the June report, which in turn cited Marketbuzz and Wall Street research, the U.S. market is projected to grow from an estimated 617 megawatts of new photovoltaic installations this year to 617 megawatts in 2009, 1.02 gigawatts (thousands of megawatts) in 2010 and 1.63 gigawatts in 2011.

Meanwhile, another chart – this one citing Solarbuzz, Navigant Consulting, Greentech Media's PV News and China's Renewable Energy Development Project progress report – forecasts that the German market will grow 6 percent from 1.28 gigawatts of capacity in 2008 to 1.35 gigawatts in 2012.

But in spite of slower growth than other countries, JP Morgan expects Germany – by far the largest solar market today – to remain one of the world's largest markets in 2012.

According to the chart, which Calisolar CEO Roy Johnson included in a presentation at Intersolar this week, South Korea will be the third-largest market at 957 megawatts. And even separated out from its country, California alone could be counted as the fourth-largest market, as it is expected to reach 920 megawatts.

“It's got roughly half the population of Germany, twice the incident sunlight and about one-tenth the market of Germany [today],” Johnson said of California.

The JP Morgan chart projects that the fastest-growing markets in the next four years will be Greece, expected to grow 135 percent, followed by South Korea expected to grow 89 percent, and then Italy, which is expected to grow 65 percent.
In spite of faster growth, Italy's market will be smaller than that of Spain in 2012, according to the chart, which shows Italy at 404 megawatts and Spain at 450 megawatts.

The Spanish solar market has taken off, due to a generous incentive program. But the program is set to expire in September, causing industry-wide uncertainty about whether the new program will continue to strongly support solar installations (see Solar Firms Struggle to Forecast 2009).

Reuters reported Thursday that the Spanish government plans to ask the country's national energy commission to limit new solar subsidies to a capacity of 300 megawatts a year, compared with a current cap of 1.2 gigawatts.

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