Canadian Solar Canada

Times Square Goes Green With Solar Powered Billboard
Ricoh Company Ltd., of Tyoko, has announced plans for a billboard to be powered by wind and solar power.
The billboard, which will stand on 7th Avenue, 42nd Street, is expected to be operational in December of this year. It will be powered by 45 solar panels and 4 wind turbines, and Ricoh Company Ltd. expect the change to reduce carbon emissions in the area by 18 tons each year.
The sign's predecessors can be found in San Francisco - the first of its type in the U.S - plus two in Canada, and two in South Africa.
In 2006, Johannesburg was home to the first solar powered billboard, developed by Nedbank. It supplies power to a nearby school, and displayed the phrase 'This Isn't a Billboard. It's a Power Plant'.
A second followed a year later, when Nedbank erected a new billboard in Cape Town in December 2007. It currently provides power for a local youth centre.
It was in January of this year that Pacific Gas and Electric Company installed the billboard in San Francisco. It can be found at 1000 Brannon Street, and generates a maximum of 3.4KW of power, through 20 solar panels. It was developed as part of the company's 'We Can Do This' campaign, which centres on the company's commitment to the environment.
Unlike its American and South African counterparts, the two Canadian solar powered boards are not connected to the public power grids. But they represent the same cause.
One, developed by the finance company Vancity, commissioned the sign as a symbol of their commitment to tan active environmental policy. The company claims to want to develop a carbon neutral policy, and used the billboard as a promotion of that fact.
With billboards like these springing up in some of the world's major cities, it marks a new partnership between cosmopolitan tradition and sustainability initiatives; where before sustainable energy was perhaps viewed as a rural luxury, it is now being pioneered as having a legitimate place in the city.
Now that companies such as Ricoh Company Ltd., Vancity and Nedbank are 'going green', corporations are becoming more and more aware of their environmental responsibilities.
Whilst solar powered billboards are more symbolic than practical - powering only limited areas - they can be tied to the theme of a growing environmental consciousness. With major companies investing in such installations in major cities, it shows that corporations are looking to develop an environmentally ethical image.
Indeed, many companies are bucking the trend. Waitrose - owned by the John Lewis Partnership - trialled a rapeseed oil fuel for their lorries in 2007, and most of the major supermarket chains are now encouraging the precedence of reusable bags.
It is hard to tell whether these commitments are out of genuine environmental concern or out of concern for pubic image and profits, but it marks a step, nonetheless; the more the general public demands an environmentally motivated business sector, the more the business sector will feel the pressure to concede to these demands.
With a rise in political concern for the environment, perhaps also coming out of public demand, businesses could feel the strain of legislature, too.
About the Author
Chris Woolfrey is the
solar panels
expert at EcoSwitch The environmental social network.
Canadian Solar on ice with icehockey star Thomas Tragust (for mobile)
| Affordable Solar & Wind |
|
|
Canadian Pacific to Canada $59.99 Canadian Pacific to Canada - Wall Decal |
|
|
Canada, Canadian Lumberjacks $19.99 Canada, Canadian Lumberjacks - Premium Poster |
|
|
Canadian Rockies, Canada $24.99 Canadian Rockies, Canada - Photographic Print |
|
|
Canadian Rockies, Alberta, Canada $24.99 Canadian Rockies, Alberta, Canada - Photographic Print |
|
|
Canadian Flag, Canada $24.99 John Warburton-lee Canadian Flag, Canada - Photographic Print |
|
|
Canadian Falls, Niagara Falls, Canada $29.99 Panoramic Images Canadian Falls, Niagara Falls, Canada - Photographic Print |
|
|
Road in Canadian Rockies, Alberta, Canada $129.99 Panoramic Images Road in Canadian Rockies, Alberta, Canada - Wall Decal |
|
|
Canadian Parliament, Ottowa, Ontario, Canada $124.99 Walter Bibikow Canadian Parliament, Ottowa, Ontario, Canada - Wall Mural |
|
|
Canadian Parliament Ottawa Ontario Canada $29.99 Panoramic Images Canadian Parliament Ottawa Ontario Canada - Photographic Print |
|
|
Refection of Mountains in Water, Canadian Rockies, Canada $129.99 Panoramic Images Refection of Mountains in Water, Canadian Rockies, Canada - Wall Decal |
|
|
Quebec, Canada - Canadian Pacific Railroad Promotional Poster $19.99 Quebec, Canada - Canadian Pacific Railroad Promotional Poster - Premium Poster |
|
|
Steam Engine of the Canadian Pacific Railway, Vancouver, Canada $24.99 Steam Engine of the Canadian Pacific Railway, Vancouver, Canada - Photographic Print |
|
|
Canadian Flags Flying in the Wind, Vancouver, Canada $24.99 Rick Gerharter Canadian Flags Flying in the Wind, Vancouver, Canada - Photographic Print |
|
|
Canadian Rockies Just Outside Kananaskis, Alberta, Canada $24.99 Canadian Rockies Just Outside Kananaskis, Alberta, Canada - Photographic Print |
|
|
Canadian Rockies, Banff National Park, Alberta, Canada $24.99 Canadian Rockies, Banff National Park, Alberta, Canada - Photographic Print |
|
|
Canadian Pacific Advertising Canada as a Holiday Destination in 1935 $39.99 Canadian Pacific Advertising Canada as a Holiday Destination in 1935 - Giclee Print |

US $156.00














































