No green house gases 
The first and foremost advantage of solar energy is that, beyond panel production, it does not emit any green house gases.
Solar energy is produced by conducting the sun’s radiation – a process void of any smoke, gas, or other chemical by-product.
This is the main driving force behind all green energy technology, as
 nations attempt to meet climate change obligations in curbing 
emissions.
Italy’s Montalto di Castro solar park
 is a good example of solar’s contribution to curbing emissions. It 
avoids 20,000 tonnes per year of carbon emissions compared to fossil 
fuel energy production.
Ongoing Free Energy
Another advantage of using solar energy is that beyond initial installation and maintenance, solar energy is free. 
Solar doesn’t require expensive and ongoing raw materials like oil or
 coal, and requires significantly lower operational labor than 
conventional power production. Raw materials don’t have to be constantly
 extracted, refined, and transported to the power plant.
Life expectancy ranges between manufacturers, but many panels 
produced today carry a 25-30 year warranty – with a life expectancy of 
up to 40 years.
Decentralization of power
Solar energy offers decentralization in most (sunny) locations, meaning self-reliant societies.
Oil, coal, and gas used to produce conventional electricity is often 
transported cross-country or internationally. This transportation has a 
myriad of additional costs, including monetary costs, pollution costs of
 transport, and roading wear and tear costs, all of which is avoided 
with solar.
Of course, decentralization has its limits as some locations get more sunlight than others.
Going off the grid with solar 
Solar energy can be produced on or off the grid.
On grid means a house remains connected to the state electricity 
grid. Off grid has no connection to the electricity grid, so the house, 
business or whatever being powered is relying solely on solar or solar-hybrid.
The ability to produce electricity off the grid is a major advantage 
of solar energy for people who live in isolated and rural areas. Power 
prices and the cost of installing power lines are often exorbitantly 
high in these places and many have frequent power-cuts.
Many city-dwellers are also choosing to go off the grid with their alternate energy as part of a self-reliant lifestyle.
Solar jobs
A particularly relevant and advantageous feature of solar energy production is that it creates jobs.
The EIAA states that Europe’s solar industry has created 100,000 jobs so far.
Solar jobs come in many forms, from manufacturing, installing, 
monitoring and maintaining solar panels, to research and design, 
development, cultural integration, and policy jobs.
The book Natural Capitalism offers a good perspective on the employment potential of green design and a prudent approach to using resources.
The book proposes that while green technology and associated 
employment can be expensive, much greater money can be saved when 
combined with proven “whole-system” efficiency strategies (e.g passive 
lighting and airflow).
With solar energy currently contributing only an estimated 4% of the 
world’s electricity, and an economic-model where raw materials don’t 
have to be indefinitely purchased and transported, it’s reasonable so 
assume solar jobs are sustainable if the solar industry can survive the 
recession.
Solar’s avoidance of politics and price volatility
One of the biggest advantages of solar energy is the ability to avoid
 the politics and price volatility that is increasingly characterizing 
fossil fuel markets.
The sun is an unlimited commodity that can be sourced from many 
locations, meaning solar is less vulnerable to the price manipulations 
and politics that have more than doubled the price of many fossil fuels 
in the past decade.
While the price of fossil fuels have increased, the per watt price of
 solar energy production has more than halved in the past decade – and 
is set to become even cheaper in the near future as better technology 
and economies of scale take effect.
Furthermore, the ever-abundant nature of the sun’s energy would hint 
at a democratic and competitive energy market – where wars aren’t fought
 over oil fields and high-demand raw materials aren’t controlled by 
monopolies.
Of course, a new form of politics has emerged with regard to government incentives and the adoption of solar, however these politics are arguably minor compared to the fossil fuel status quo.
Saving eco-systems and livelihoods 
Because solar doesn’t rely on constantly mining raw materials, it 
doesn’t result in the destruction of forests and eco-systems that occurs
 with many fossil fuel operations.
Destruction can come in many forms, from destruction through accepted
 extraction methods, to more irresponsible practices in vulnerable 
areas, to accidents.
Major examples include Canada’s tar sands mining which involves the 
systematic destruction of the Boreal Forest (which accounts for 25% of 
the world’s intact forest land), and creates large toxic by-product 
ponds .
The Niger Delta is an example where excessive and irresponsible oil 
extraction practices have poisoned fishing deltas previously used by 
villagers as the main source of food and employment, creating extremely 
desperate poverty and essentially decimating villages.
A more widely known, but arguably lower human-cost incident is the 
2010 BP oil spill in the Gulf of Mexico. It killed 11 people and spilled
 780 thousand cubic meters of crude oil into the sea.
An interesting glance at the situation caused by destructive fossil fuel company practices in the Niger Delta. Sweet Crude is a good documentary if you want to learn more.
The best is yet to come
Solar technology is currently improving in leaps and bounds. Across 
the world, and particularly in Europe, savvy clean technology 
researchers are making enormous developments in solar technology.
What was expensive, bulky, and inefficient yesterday, is becoming cheaper, more accessible, and vastly more efficient each week.
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