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We Built This SolarCityEntrepreneur Lyndon Rive wants to solarize your house for a low, low price11 Apr 2008
Would you pay $25,000 to $30,000 to put solar panels on your home? If you're like most cash-strapped Americans, you'd balk at that five-figure expense, no matter how green you aspire to be. OK, what if you could do it for $1,000 or $2,000?
SolarCity CEO Lyndon Rive.
Launched in 2006 by two brothers, Lyndon and Peter Rive, SolarCity also takes advantage of economies of scale by getting whole neighborhoods to go solar at once -- hence the company's name. In just a year and a half, SolarCity has grown to become the largest residential solar-panel installer in California (though it does commercial installations too), with 235 employees and $30 million in sales last year. The company has expanded into Arizona and Oregon (states which, like California, have serious subsidies for solar), and is planning to be up and running on the East Coast by the end of the year. SolarCity CEO Lyndon Rive is an intense, earnest 31-year-old who launched two other companies before jumping into the exploding market for renewable energy. I caught up with him at the Aspen Environment Forum, where he represented his company in accepting the first-ever Aspen Institute Energy and Environment Award for Corporate Energy Generation.
There goes the neighborhood ...
Photo: iStockphoto
We're launching a new service that's going to revolutionize the adoption of solar. The homeowner will be able to pay for the system out of the savings on their electric bill. There will be a low down payment -- say $1,000 or $2,000 -- and then your monthly fees [to SolarCity] combined with your new electric bill will be less than your old electric bill. We're essentially leasing people the solar systems. We're able to capitalize on the commercial tax credits that residents aren't able to capitalize on.
We're trying to improve the [Bayview-Hunters Point] neighborhood. It's been impacted, ironically enough, by an old, dirty, polluting coal power plant right next to it. Now they've shut down that power plant, and the city of San Francisco is trying to replace that with green companies, new innovation from cleantech. So the city is helping us with this.
They have a sense of being a part of a change -- they know that this person they're installing solar for is reducing their carbon footprint. It's a tremendously fulfilling job.
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