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95%
2000mw
solar cells generate electric currents directly from the sun light
Some power plants do. Any plant that burns oil, coal, or gas from underground resources could be considered a "fossil fuel" plant. There are however nuclear, solar, hydro-electric and wind powered power plants.
If you are referring to solar-electric power, there are no specific power requirements for a chest freezer. The problem is that most solar-electric systems are designed to be connected to the normal power grid. If you have a power failure, your solar power system will automatically shut down. This is to protect electric utility workers from being shocked and injured by solar power systems providing power to a neighborhood that has been disconnected from the normal grid. In order to use your solar system even when the grid is down, you'll need a device that will isolate your solar system from the grid when the grid power is down. THEN we can talk about how much solar power you'll need to power your freezer. Remember that when the Sun goes down, you'll lose your solar power; if you intend that the freezer should continue to work at night or bad weather, you'll need either a backup generator or a whopping huge stack of batteries. Will you want power for anything else? Lights? Refrigerator? Furnace? Add it all up and then double it, so that there will be enough power tomorrow to not only run the system but also recharge the batteries.
about 7% od Americans use solar power
depending on how much the solar power costs possibly.
It depends on the capacity of the solar panels. How many solar panel are available, what kind and capacity of each panel, how they are connected together, and how much sun light is available at the time all determine how much power is available from the system.
I also like to add to the solar shade, a solar panel curtain for full effect. It does help with the electric bill, keeping the home warm in winter, cool in summer.
define green....... anything like a solar panel or a windmill...yes. But like a power plant no it costs way to much to burn or incinerate anything to make energy...unless you consider a nuclear power plant green.
Ideally, you would leave your solar panels out year-round, and just keep them clean and free of debris (leaves, etc.) to get as much a return on them as possible.
Irrelevant, solar power is completely useless