Solar Streetlights – Keeping up with growing populations, tight budgets and citizens pushing for lower carbon emissions are competing priorities for municipalities and counties across the country. But municipalities are increasingly finding creative solutions to step up to the challenge.
One example is the City of Beaumont just outside of Los Angeles, which is the fastest growing municipality in California. The city has installed for over 10 years and, in 2015, decided to be the first in the country to insist on solar powered fixtures for all new street and park lighting. Since then, hundreds of solar streetlights have been installed.
Solar Streetlights as the Cost-Effective Choice
Not only did going solar reinforce the city’s position as a leader in sustainability in city planning, it also eliminated ongoing electrical costs and the risk of copper wire theft. But the most significant savings was the reduced install costs. Solar streetlights mean that there is no need to dig trenches for wires or to create a connection to the grid. With a usual cost of $25 a foot to trench and remediate for wires, this can quickly escalate with rocky or otherwise tough terrain.
“These solar streetlights produce a great deal of light reliably and are really a fantastic solution,” said James Love, CEO of Beaumont Electric. “And in terms of install, there is nothing easier, wired or solar.”