Who benefits most from rooftop solar capacity?

Who breathes cleaner air when Americans put solar panels on their roofs? Using plant-level emissions data, an air-pollution transport model, and census-block demographics, Bobby Harris (Georgia Tech)—the study’s EPIcenter affiliate— and Travis E. Dauwalter (Artera Services) show that today’s rooftop solar fleet delivers $0.77 in environmental benefits per person annually and disproportionately benefits higher-income households. […]

Managing Vehicle Charging During Emergencies via Conservative Distribution System Modeling

When a hurricane is coming, can a city with lots of electric cars top-up all those batteries fast enough without frying the local power grid? Three Georgia Tech engineers—Alejandro Owen Aquino, Samuel Talkington and EPIcenter affiliate Daniel Molzahn—built a computer model to find out.   Using realistic-but-not-real data from Greensboro, North Carolina, the model shows that […]

The state of the clean energy workforce in Georgia

To gain a deeper understanding of the current energy landscape in Georgia and the southeast, this blog series examines emerging topics in the energy sector, provides timely information on key energy challenges and opportunities, and discusses how Georgia and the southeast are adapting to meet growing energy needs while embracing sustainable energy goals and supporting […]

Solar farms can brighten agricultural land values

Municipalities have shunned solar farms because these large installations are believed to reduce property values. Now, in a first-of-its-kind study, Georgia Tech economist Laura Taylor shows that utility-scale solar farms don’t adversely affect sales prices for agricultural land.  The work, published recently in the journal Land Economics, may help inform local decision-making. “As zoning boards […]

Solar Geoengineering Could Save 400,000 Lives a Year, Georgia Tech Study Says

When it comes to finding solutions to climate change, there’s no shortage of technologies vying for attention, from renewable energy to electric vehicles to nuclear energy. One such contender, solar geoengineering, is favored by proponents who say it could quickly cool the planet and give the world time to fully implement efforts to limit emissions […]