Solar panels report, January to March 2020

This information is a report on energy production from the solar panels on the roof at Church of the Redeemer.

January 2020

Week Peak Power Energy Produced
01/01/2020 – 01/07/2020 12.0 kW 123 kWh
01/08/2020 – 01/14/2020 9.19 kW 51.9 kWh
01/15/2020 – 01/21/2020 11.6 kW 135 kWh
01/22/2020 – 01/28/2020 15.0 kW 175 kWh
01/29/2020 – 01/31/2020 6.38 kW 37.9 kWh
January 2020 Total: 523 kWh
Previous Month Total: 400 kWh
Year to Date: 523 kWh

Your carbon offset for this month: 796 lbs

You have offset the equivalent of 9 trees.

February 2020

Week Peak Power Energy Produced
02/01/2020 – 02/07/2020 14.6 kW 168 kWh
02/08/2020 – 02/14/2020 16.2 kW 279 kWh
02/15/2020 – 02/21/2020 19.7 kW 522 kWh
02/22/2020 – 02/28/2020 19.0 kW 407 kWh
02/29/2020 – 02/29/2020 18.3 kW 56.8 kWh
February 2020 Total: 1.43 MWh
Previous Month Total: 523 kWh
Year to Date: 1.96 MWh

Your carbon offset for this month: 2,183 lbs

You have offset the equivalent of 25 trees.

March 2020

Week Peak Power Energy Produced
03/01/2020 – 03/07/2020 18.3 kW 321 kWh
03/08/2020 – 03/14/2020 22.3 kW 502 kWh
03/15/2020 – 03/21/2020 20.0 kW 828 kWh
03/22/2020 – 03/28/2020 21.2 kW 428 kWh
03/29/2020 – 03/31/2020 21.2 kW 305 kWh
March 2020 Total: 2.38 MWh
Previous Month Total: 1.43 MWh
Year to Date: 4.34 MWh

Your carbon offset for this month: 1.65 tons

You have offset the equivalent of 42 trees.

Quarterly Production

Year and quarter to Date: 4.34 MWh

Lifetime value: 133.32 MWh

Placque saying that the solar panels were given by John Pearson.

The solar panels at Church of the Redeemer were paid for by a bequest of John Pearson.

Church of the Redeemer

Welcome to Church of the Redeemer: Worshiping God, living in community, and reaching out to the world. We are an Episcopal Church serving north King County and south Snohomish County, Washington. As you travel your road, go with friends walking the way of Jesus at Redeemer.

Church of the Redeemer is at 6210 Northeast 181st Street in Kenmore, Washington. We are a short distance north of Bothell Way, near the Burke-Gilman Trail. The entrance looks like a gravel driveway. The campus is larger on the inside than it is on the outside. And we managed to hide a large building on the side of a hill that is not easily seen from the street.

Click for COVID-19 updates.

The Episcopal Church welcomes you.