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Solar electric generating system in Morristown

The Morristown, N.J., Wastewater Treatment Facility held a ribbon-cutting ceremony on May 28, 2009 for its new solar electric generating system –the town's first publicly owned system – amid an audience of elected officials, local dignitaries and representatives of the New Jersey Department of Environmental Protection and the New Jersey Clean Energy Program. Morristown Mayor Donald Cresitello, who championed the effort to install the system, reports that it will be green for the environment and green for Morristown's taxpayers.

"This project saves taxpayer money," Cresitello stated. "By reducing energy costs at the wastewater treatment facility, and bringing new revenue from sales of Solar Renewable Energy Certificates, the system will pay for itself within 10 years."

A New Jersey Clean Energy Program rebate of $1,464,734 significantly lowered the project's net cost. The 578-kilowatt solar installation will provide approximately 40% of the electricity necessary to run the plant from the clean, renewable power of sunlight, saving the town a minimum of $90,000 a year. Additionally, the project will qualify for more than 600 Solar Renewable Energy Certificates per year to help offset the cost of the system, contributing up to $384,000 in the first year alone.

The system includes 2,550 Kyocera solar modules (205-watt KD205GX-LP and 200-watt KC200GT models) on ground-mounted arrays and carport structures, with 390 other modules making up the balance of the installation. The entire system is expected to produce more than 635,800 kilowatt hours per year — enough to power about 73 typical New Jersey households. By offsetting an estimated 359 metric tons of CO2 emissions, the system's carbon impact is equivalent to removing 81 cars from the road.



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