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View Full Version : One man's fight to become free of FPL.


xcel
08-27-2006, 11:06 AM
Kaizer Talib wants to make his Fort Lauderdale home independent of FPL with the help of his own windmill and other tools. (http://www.miami.com/mld/miamiherald/news/breaking_news/15364382.htm?source=rss&channel=miamiherald_breaking_news)

Diana Moskovitz - Miami Herald - August 27, 2007

http://www.cleanmpg.com/photos/data/501/Solar_Panels_on_home_roof.jpg
Solar PV can help you get off the grid … for a price.

They are called ''zero energy'' or ''off the grid'' - homes that are free of local utilities. And architect Kaizer Talib wants his Fort Lauderdale home to join them.

Solar roof panels heat his water. Fiberglass tiles along his sea wall will heat his pool.

Solar electric panels are planned to provide energy for another 50 to 60 percent of his house, powering tasks like cooking, washing and drying.

SERIOUS INTENTIONS

And a 55-foot-tall windmill would go in front of his home. Talib hopes to sell any extra power generated back to FPL at half price, he said.

''Our goal is to produce all the energy for the home and then some,'' Talib said.

Talib's home, which he designed, is built around two ideas -- saving energy and doing as little harm to the environment as possible.

An extra layer of concrete poured around the house provides insulation. The white walls and metal roof reflect light and heat.

The air conditioner is Freon-free and uses up to 40 percent less energy than those with Freon, he said.

The stove uses magnetic fields to heat up metal pots for cooking, but it won't burn a piece of paper.

Talib said he first began looking into such energy sources during the 1973 oil crisis, when oil prices quadrupled and gasoline was rationed. Since then, he has been interested in the topic and designed ''energy conserving'' homes as part of his work as an architect. He recently got his first hybrid car. ''There are a lot of basic methods available around the world,'' said Talib. ``We have explored very little.''

COSTLY UNDERTAKING

More motivation came last year when Hurricane Wilma knocked out his family's power for two weeks. ''Even if I have only 60 percent of my power, it's still better than last year, when I had zero,'' said his wife, Bettina Lambrechts.

Creating such a home can be costly. Installing enough solar panels to power a 2,000-square-foot house would cost about $25,000, Talib said.

But Talib hopes that will change and state leaders will begin offering more incentives for using the new technology. Without financial help, homes like his will continue to be scarce, he said.

''It's important that we change it. That would make more people install these expensive alternative sources of technology,'' Talib said.

Sledge
08-27-2006, 11:08 AM
I plan on getting solar panels and maybe a wind turbine when I finally buy a house. It's definitely worth it.

RH77
08-27-2006, 01:28 PM
I haven't done a whole lot of research on the subject, just the price :eek: and here in the Midwest, I have concerns of hail damaging the array or else I'd seriously consider it (after a few years of leftover change cashed-in ;) ). Has that kind of damage been a problem?

RH77



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