A $ 1 million array of solar electric panels now gracing the roof of a Twin Cities warehouse complex marks a couple of clean-tech milestones in these parts.
For Murphy Warehouse, which owns the building, the installation marks what is believed to be the first big installation atop a flat-roofed Twin Cities commercial building. And for a fledgling Bloomington-based solar company, the project marks its first major commercial project.
Murphy CEO Richard Murphy, an architect by training who has a green streak, said the installation on his Fridley warehouses complements numerous energy efficiency and storm water-management projects the logistics company has undertaken in recent years to cut its energy and waste bills and lower its environmental impact.
Murphy is buying the equipment from TenKsolar, a two-year old Minnesota company brandishing what its executives say is a breakthrough "cell-optimizing" system that generates more energy from available light.
"Two years ago, solar power was 45 cents per kilowatt hour, and we're delivering it for 20 cents. And in two years it will be 10 cents as industry sales ramp up and the technology continues to improve," said TenKsolar CEO Joel Cannon.
Xcel Energy residential customers in Minnesota pay about 10 cents per kilowatt hour on average. Minnesota is considered a low-cost electric state thanks to an economical mix of coal, nuclear power, natural gas, wind and hydro-generated electricity.
But Cannon, 45, said his company's system already is competitive with electricity prices in higher-cost states.
Minnesota's long, gray winters are unlikely to make the state a nation-leading solar generator anytime soon.