Software Company SAS Considers Solar Installation in North Carolina
By Shirley Siluk Gregory
This article was originally posted on EcoLocalizer, part of the Green Options Media Blog Network. Visit EcoLocalizer for more news on local environmental action.
The News & Observer reports that software company SAS is investigating whether to build a solar energy farm at the firm’s headquarters in Cary, North Carolina.
The proposed installation would be able to generate 1 megawatt of electricity, nearly 10 times as much as the next-largest solar farm in the state. That facility, located at the North Carolina Zoo in Asheboro, produces about 105 kilowatts of electricity.
The News & Observer quoted SAS spokesman Dave Thomas, who said the company is currently trying to determine whether an on-site solar farm would be economically feasible for SAS. Businesses that build clean-energy facilities in North Carolina are eligible for state tax credits, but federal solar tax credits are set to drop at the end of this year from 30 percent to 10 percent of installation costs.
SAS produces business intelligence software for a variety of industries, as well as for small businesses and government agencies. It serves about 44,000 customers around the globe and generated $2.15 billion in revenues last year.
Tags: business, Business and Commercial Solar Power, news, north carolina, SAS

