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Monday, March 30, 2015

WORCESTER — A wind power experiment has come to an end at Walmart.

The Arkansas-based operator of discount retail stores removed turbines from the parking lot of its Worcester supercenter in the last week and will now evaluate what it learned there and at two other U.S. sites, a spokeswoman for the company said.

"We're going through the data to figure out what we learned, and we're applying those lessons in a variety of renewable energy projects," said Kara Greco, Walmart director of sustainability communications.

Twelve small turbines were installed on the top of 48-foot parking-lot lights when Wal-Mart Stores Inc. opened its 209,000-square-foot supercenter in May 2010. At the time, it was only the second Walmart site in the country with turbines installed in a parking lot.

The turbines were financed and installed by a private company to generate power to be sold to Walmart over a period of years for the parking lot lights and the store. Shoppers could usually count on seeing them spinning in the breeze.

Yet in the last five years, the market for small wind-generating installations has changed, and Walmart's renewable energy agenda has evolved.

Reduced subsidies from state governments have impacted demand in the U.S. market for small and medium-size wind turbines, according to the clean energy research firm Navigant Research. At the same time, solar energy systems have become more affordable.

Nearly 3,700 new small wind turbines were purchased in 2012 in the United States, about half as many as in 2011, the U.S. Department of Energy reported. Small turbine sales totaled $101 million in 2012, down about 12 percent from the year before.

The company that financed, designed and installed the Worcester turbines also no longer exists. Deerpath Energy of Marblehead was sold in 2010 to Southwest Windpower, an Arizona business. In 2013, Oregon turbine maker XZERES Corp. bought the assets of Southwest.

For Walmart, wind power is the dominant renewable energy it uses in Mexico, according to Ms. Greco. U.S. company Foundation Windpower also installed and still operates a large turbine at a Walmart distribution center in Tehama, California.

But solar power has become the dominant renewable energy the company uses in the United States. Walmart expects to unveil 400 solar installations over the next four years in the United States. "In the U.S., solar is definitely our largest portion of renewable energy," Ms. Greco said. "It really depends on what's the most economic."

Contact Lisa Eckelbecker at lisa.eckelbecker@telegram.com

6 comments:

  1. With a number of grants available, it would be so nice to have solar panels on our barn roof. The barn is big enough, and has plenty of southern exposure, so what is the problem?? Our belonging to Templeton Municipal Light, is the problem ! How can that be ?? It seems J.D. and his merry band of Commissioners will not buy the extra power, so it is a no go, unless things change. That is the funny thing with life, you never know what is going to happen.

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  5. To bad the walmart idea failed. Think of the amount of power it would produce if every light pole in town has a small turbine on top. Combined power output and capacity would be huge. If all the same type units repairs would be learned quickly and cost to service would be low. With the school power needs they should get grants for solar panels and have the power when they need it the most when schools open. The amount of cost for the lights is a staggering amount and sure to grow when the electronic stack scrubber starts up for the chip burner. Has the chip burner started up yet?
    All has been quiet on that issue.

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  6. It would seem that Templeton residents could ask for Special Legislation to force the town utility to buy back the extra power generated by these solar panels if that is what town meeting thought appropriate.

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