Kentucky National Guard boasts first net-zero site, produces more energy than used
Nestled in the mountains of Eastern Kentucky, an array of blue, glass-like panel-covered buildings sparkle in the afternoon sun, and the more the sun shines down on them, the greater the benefit because these panels harness the power of the sun and produce electricity for the Kentucky National Guard’s Harold L. Disney Training Center.
Aerial view of solar panels installed on the buildings of the Harold L. Disney Training Center in Artemus, Ky, June 7, 2012. The solar panel installation has effectively reduced the site's energy usage to net-zero, meaning the site produces more energy than it uses.
Located near Barbourville, Ky., the buildings at the training center are unique and may even be considered an oddity sitting in the middle of Kentucky’s coal country, but the 851 solar panels at the center represent a positive impact the Guard is making for the commonwealth of Kentucky and the environment.
The more than 550 acre training center is the first of its kind in the Kentucky National Guard to become a net-zero site. The term “net-zero” means that more energy is produced at a site than the site uses to sustain itself. Daily electrical operation of the Disney Training Center now comes from the skyward facing panels.
Along with the reduction of energy used, there is also a financial advantage for Kentucky. Army Capt. Joseph Sloan, designs and programs manager for the Kentucky National Guard said the energy production could produce a surplus of energy, giving the Guard a credit toward their monthly energy costs.
“We’re managing the budget, so this helps supplement the utility bill,” Sloan said. “But it’s also the right thing to do for the environment. It’s the responsible thing to do.”
According to the National Guard Bureau in Arlington, Va., Kentucky currently ranks first in the entire National Guard in energy reduction, and third in energy production.
Sloan said this achievement is not only because of the solar panel installation, but also in conjunction with an ongoing “energy audit.” Sloan and his office conduct this review in all armories and training sites in Kentucky.
“Everywhere, we’re checking windows, lighting, insulation and improving what we can, based on balancing the need and getting the greatest bang for the buck,” he said.
At the Disney Training Center, Soldiers with Kentucky’s 201st Engineer Battalion constructed the buildings and the Guard partnered with an Athens, Ohio based clean energy company to install the panels.
Sloan said plans for more of the energy-absorbing panels are in the works, spreading the benefits to different regions of Kentucky. Installation is currently scheduled for the newest readiness centers, one recently completed in Owensboro, Ky., and the future site in Burlington, in northern Kentucky. Work to add more panels also continues at Wendell H. Ford Regional Training Center in Greenville.
The solar panel additions will continue the Kentucky Guard’s effort to shrink its environmental footprint across the commonwealth.
The Kentucky National Guard’s progress in solar energy recently attracted the attention of the international publication, Photon Magazine, who sent representatives to visit the state in June. Matthew Hirsch, associate editor with the San Francisco based magazine said the visit was part of a monthly series called PV (photovoltaic) Coast to Coast.
“Our trip has been great,” he said. “We have met a lot of people here that are passionate, knowledgeable and interacting in growing solar energy.”
The fact that the Disney Center was the first net-zero site allows for some bragging rights in the Guard, but also the beginning of a consistency of clean energy used by Kentucky’s Citizen-Soldiers.
“This showcases us here in Artemus,” said Army Sgt. 1st Class Chaz Martin, noncommissioned officer in charge of training at the center. “National media even get to see that we are part of the Guard team here in Kentucky. We’re going green, saving energy and not costing the government as much.”
“This is a beautiful location, a place Soldiers have been coming to get their training since 1979,” Martin said. “And now that we are net-zero, we’re making that much bigger of an impact on the Kentucky Guard.”
Source: U.S. National Guard
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