Did you know that mushrooms are one of the most energy-hungry crops to produce? They must be grown indoors in a carefully controlled 60-degree high-humidity environment where they double in size every 24 hours. Most of the energy is used for air conditioning and heating, and refrigeration is required for dehumidification even in the winter.
“Mushrooms require a constant back and forth between heating and cooling,” explains Tom Brosius, co-owner, in a SunPower case study.
With 100,000 square feet of growing rooms, Marlboro Mushrooms partnered with SunPower to offset that energy consumption. SunPower engineered, designed, and built a 1.13-megawatt ground-mount solar installation with sun-tracking capability.
The company reports that the system has delivered on their expectations of reliability, quality, and value, performing at or above projections since it was commissioned in November 2011. The solar installation produces more than 1,700 megawatts of clean energy for mushroom farming operations each year.
As a result, the mushroom producer has dramatically reduced its energy costs, even occasionally generating more electricity than it uses.
WINERY CUTS ELECTRICITY COSTS WITH
a sunpower SOLAR SYSTEM
Making a world-class cabernet takes more than just California sunshine and grapes. It also takes quite a bit of energy, particularly in the barrelhouse, where grapes are slowly and expertly transformed into wine. Most electricity usage in the wine industry goes toward refrigeration for fermentation cooling, cold stabilization, and cold storage. Other uses of energy include pumping, compressed air, bottling, and lighting.
Rodney Strong Vineyards is one of the largest franchises in Sonoma County, California. It has earned a reputation as an environmental steward, relying exclusively on Sonoma County grapes and investing in more than 1,000 acres of vineyard land. In 2003, Rodney Strong decided to take its environmental commitment to the next level by going solar.
SunPower designed and installed a solar power system on the rooftop of the winery’s 100,000-square-foot barrelhouse. Covering 80,000 square feet, the 766-kilowatt, 4,032-panel SunPower system is one of the wine industry’s largest. It generates the daytime energy equivalent to powering nearly 800 homes, reducing the winery’s energy usage by 35 percent and cutting its electricity costs by more than 40 percent.
Over the next 25 years, Rodney Strong’s solar generated electricity is expected to avoid 8,700 tons of carbon emissions. That’s the equivalent of planting 2,500 acres of trees.