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General Motors installs solar array at its Lordstown, Ohio, Complex

2.2 MW solar PV project is the automotive manufacturer's largest in Western Hemisphere

General Motors’ new 2.2 megawatt ground-mounted solar array will be complete by the end of 2014 at its Lordstown Complex. When the last of more than 8,500 solar panels are in place, it will be GM’s largest solar installation in the Western Hemisphere.

The renewable energy produced by the array is enough to power nearly 1.5 percent of the plant and helps avoid the equivalent of 1,993 tons of carbon dioxide emissions from entering the atmosphere. That is equivalent to the amount of carbon pulled from the air by 1,634 acres of U.S. forests in one year. 

“With more solar installations than any other automotive company and the second-highest percentage of solar among all commercial users, GM shows that manufacturing and the use of renewable energy can go hand-in-hand.” said Rhone Resch, president and CEO of the Solar Energy Industries Association.
 
Easily seen from the Ohio Turnpike, the array will stand as a visual cue to the more than 49 million travelers who pass it each year that GM is committed to the use of solar power.
 
“You don’t often think of the Midwest when you think of ideal locations for solar, but reduced costs and increased utility rates have made sites like Lordstown and Toledo optimal locations to expand GM’s use of solar power,” said Rob Threlkeld, GM global manager of renewable energy.
 
“We applaud General Motors for setting the pace1 when it comes to automotive manufacturing solar installations and deployment,” Resch noted.
 

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Energy efficiency  •  Energy infrastructure  •  Photovoltaics (PV)  •  Solar electricity