Wal-Mart Stores Inc., the world's largest retailer, has installed
more than 150 U.S. solar projects and expects to have as much as 90
megawatts of capacity by year-end, more than Ikea Group and Apple Inc.
Wal-Mart’s San Diego store is the 100th to get solar
panels in California, the company said Monday in a statement. The
company currently has 62 megawatts of panels installed at U.S.
locations, and also operates fuel cells and wind turbines at some sites.
Wal-Mart, with 4,522 stores in the U.S., expects
to have 1,000 solar-powered locations by 2020, Marty Gilbert, director
of energy at the Bentonville, Arkansas-based company, said in an
interview. The retailer gets about 4 percent of its power from renewable
sources and plans to install another 100 solar systems by the end of
2012, demonstrating that renewable energy is economically viable to
businesses.
“We are trying to show folks that you can not
only pursue these sustainability initiatives, they also make business
sense,” he said.
The company expects its use of renewable power to drive down prices, he said.
“The more we get involved and commit to volume,
the more the prices come down for the technology,” he said. “Prices for
solar panels, fuel cells, wind turbines to some degree, they are all
approaching grid parity.”
Economic Sense
The company installed its first five solar
projects in 2008. It’s installing panels in markets where utility rates
are higher, such as California, Hawaii, Puerto Rico, Ohio and
Connecticut, said Gilbert. Each system must add to the bottom line for
the individual store.
“The only projects that we were doing are the ones that economically make sense at the store level.”
Wal-Mart has 26 fuel-cell projects and six
projects. A 1.1- megawatt wind turbine at a store in Red Bluff,
California, will be operational within a month, said Gilbert.
“Wall Street was watching to see if this was a
public relations game and we would be passing the cost on to our
customers, said Gilbert. ‘‘It’s not done on a portfolio basis, it’s
every store analyzed individually.”
Other large companies are also installing U.S.
solar projects. Apple Inc. is building a 20-megawatt solar farm and a
5-megawatt fuel-cell system to power a data center in North Carolina.
Ikea has solar projects at 26 U.S. sites and is planning to install 13 more, with total capacity of 38 megawatts.
Copyright 2012 Bloomberg
http://www.renewableenergyworld.com/rea/news/article/2012/07/wal-mart-beating-ikea-apple-in-u-s-solar-panel-installations