Saturday, October 27, 2012

The Excitement In and Practicality Of Micro Grids

Joe Joson , USA
October 25, 2012

 




Just what in the world are Micro Grids? Well , Micro Grids are electrical grids or electrical networks that are small as compared to the usually huge and wide spread electrical grids that tie up whole cities of a nation and sometimes even cross international borders to deliver huge amounts of electricity.


Electrical grids or electrical networks of today are composed of 'the power source' or power generating units (generators) , the transmission lines that are in thousands of volts AC (alternating current)  or DC (direct current) , (in some settings) , that go for hundreds or thousands of miles to deliver electricity.  You see them out there using these really tall electrical towers with multiple cables . These are high voltage wires that go for many miles just to deliver the power from the generators to the end users like you and me.

Another section of this high voltage grid are the sub-stations . These are the components that drop the thousands of voltages down to manageable and usable levels for re-distribution to communities after electricity has traveled all these miles.

And transmission lines are neat. They are the means with which our electricity are able to reach our homes , offices , malls etc  even as  generators are hundreds of miles away. But transmission lines become a pain when you see the fees that you pay as part of your electric bill or worse , when these lines are downed by storms and you are left in the dark , not just for a few hours but days , weeks and in some places ... months.


Now comes the Micro Grids.  These come in many sizes and configurations.  What distinguishes micro grids from the huge grids is its lower voltage , lower maintenance , a lot less components ,  independent nature etc , better efficiency , less money to maintain , a lot more flexibility . The advantages are indeed huge and becoming very hard to ignore . What do we mean by Micro Grids having  Lower voltage: For the most part , usable AC voltages range from 480 volts down to 120 .  America's commercial voltages are in the range of 480-220,  3-phase or single phase VAC (Volts AC) while its houses use 120 VAC. Europe and most of Asia use 220-240 VAC.

And why , you might ask , do we have high voltages at the transmission and distribution levels? The reason is simple. With AC transmission over long distances , the resistance or overall impedance of the wires reduce voltage levels where they are no longer effective after traveling all these huge distances .  In order to keep the high voltage for long distance transmissions , voltages are stepped up using transformers , then stepped down to usable voltages when they reach their destination.

Now, if your power generation sits right NEXT to YOU, the end user being supllied , such as the case with Solar Power-generated electricity production,  all that waste of transmission is eliminated. Solar Power generation provides that beautiful flexibility.  Solar power generation can be done just about anywhere where the sun shines. And with Micro Grids we only produce the voltage that we need ON THE SPOT. No more high voltages in the thousands of volts and no more transformers that are huge . No more transmission lines , no more transmission fees. No more heavy transformers . No more substations . And best of all, no more brown outs. AND YOUR ELECTRIC BILLS WILL BE A LOT SMALLER. 

Micro Grids will be the power configurtion of the future.  Small communities as villages, small groups of buildings , privately owned compounds ,  small neighborhoods , camps , military bases ,  hospitals can have their own Micro Grid totally INDEPENDENT OF THE BIG grid  or they could be tied up to it.

Micro Grids do not have to be over complicated. In its most basic configuration , a Micro Grid could be nothing but two buildings or two houses hooked up together on a common power source using Solar.
Connections and monitoring do not all have to be automated .  Disconnects could be manual .  

We are not trying to get rid of the huge grid. With the huge grid , power generating plants of all sizes and with differing distances from one another , with their strategic locations , give the whole network full flexibility.  When some power generating units are down or in repair,  the rest can take over and continue to supply power to their respective end users or loads.  Unfortunately our dependence on this very same flexibility could be our own weakness in times of great turmoil in a region .  If huge power generating plants are rendered inoperable due to natural calamities or civil disturbance , that whole region then pulls power from those that are still in operation . Now , if the transmission lines are destroyed, that whole region is 'dead in the water'.

With Micro Grids designed to supporting key locations , cities using PV or solar power systems, this equation radically changes.  As the huge power generating units are rendered inoperable or are cut off from the main grid, the small units stay online by themselves , supporting their own needs or even the needs of their immediate neighboring Micro Grids.   Communications are intact , key governmental functions continue to operate ,  homes can be supplied .  Hospitals will run un-interrupted.

The present high voltage infrastructure can continue to serve a purpose.   They can continue to serve as a simple link to all the Micro Grids. Links are in the form of locally and remotely operated circuit breakers .  They can be manually or electrically operated huge circuit breakers.  This gives communties and whole nations true flexibility in times of emergencies. 

In nations comprising of many islands like the Philippines , Micro Grids are ideal.  Most of the far flung villages and towns are separated from  each other by oceans and mountain ranges.  As we speak , Mindanao is still operating separately from the main grid of Luzon and the Visayas.  The HVDC (High Voltage DC)  systems that have been continuously adding high voltage lines to the islands of the Visayas and Luzon have yet to connect Mindanao to the main grid.  This explains why Mindanao is the hardest hit with brown outs . Mindanao is unable to tap into the energy sources of Luzon and the Visayas.  It is short of some 400 or so Megawatts. With Micro Grids the whole of Mindanao can be self-sustaining with its own power needs whether it ties up directly to the main grid of Luzon or not.

With Micro Grids , islands like Catanduanes which catches national attention every year for its very high power rates and an almost predictable power outages especially during the summer months , will no longer have to experience this perennial pest called brown outs.

Small villages , small groups of homes , housing developments can set up their own Micro Grid and be truly power independent and save energy costs over the long haul.

Lim Solar ,  a Philippine corporation and a subsidiary of Mendoza Solar , LLC , a California and Nevada corporation has partnered with a new an upcoming player Lorenzana Solar , another Philippine corporation that is going to handle all the installations in the Philippines .  As Lorenzana Solar is in its first stages of development as a corporation , please standby for more exciting news.

A new kid in the block , and still under wraps , is our newly established partnership with an American firm that has developed a new breed of grid level inverters that are true 'kickbutt' inverters.  Their inverters are 90 percent lighter than the present closest competitors . This is great since the competition sells you inverters that weigh close to a ton and that is hardly deployable. And this is definitely great news for Micro Grid enthusiasts like you and me !




Joe Joson
Communications, Marketing, Consulting
Lim Solar Philippines 
Mendoza Solar , LLC -California/Nevada Corporation

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Linked Profile:


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Websites:







Wednesday, October 17, 2012

How Much Do Solar Power Systems Cost


To view below article in its Word format , please click here:

This article was written to give us a basic idea just how much  residential solar panel electrical systems cost.  Not a problem.  Below is a truly basic presentation of how much your system will cost with a BONUS detailed math on why these systems make a lot of sense financially. 
                             
Section I

ON-Grid (Grid Connected Solar) – Your Solar power is connected to and interacts with the local Elec Company such as MERALCO, ETC.

A.                The Electrical Consumption and Expense

Example:
Kwhr of electricity used   600 kwhr/month
Basic (Ave rate)                Ph 9.24/kwhr
Total Elec Bill                    Ph 5,544/month

B.                 The solar electric system needed to ELIMINATE  the expensive bill.

Solar System Needed   3500 watts (3.5kw)
Solar Panel Size 240 watts /panel
Solar Panels total  15
Solar Inverter size   - 4kw
Space needed to install  25 square meters
Load KG  292

C.                 Funding, necessary to acquire the system.

Loan Total   P225,658.00/41pesos =$5503.00
Loan Interest 8%
Amortization in years 15
Monthly  P2197=$54

D.                Day One of System in FULL OPERATION, the SAVINGS start :

1.                   Your electric meter starts to run BACKWARDS which means your system ,AS DESIGNED, produces more power than you are using. You are NOT using any electricity from Meralco.  Panel size and number are designed to produce a total kwhr more than you use during the day.
2.                 The excess power generated by the solar panels are ‘SOLD’ BY YOU to Meralco, through Netmetering.
3.                 At night time the panels DO NOT PRODUCE ELECTRICITY.  You then ‘BUY BACK’ the power from MERALCO.
4.                 In effect you simply used MERALCO as your FREE ‘STORAGE’ of electricity PRODUCED  BY YOU, during the day so you can get it back at night. 
5.                 At the end of the month , your electric bill is Zero Pesos .  And it is by LAW that you can do this if you have solar panels on your roof and you have Netmetering approved according to the Law.
 
Now, let us look at the rest of the excitement:

You used to pay P5544 per month for your electricity. Now your bill is zero. Your monthly payment to the loan is P2197 per month. Looks like a monthly windfall of P3347!

Being a smart guy that you are , you sink half or more of the windfall into the loan. Your amortization years (number of years you pay into the loan)  drop according to your aggressiveness in paying off your loan. 

Let us say you ‘killed’ your loan in 7 years. 
Day one after pay off of your loan is freedom day!  Your electricity from day one of year 8 is FREE.

Solar panels are known to last 30 to 40 years with the least efficiency loss and least maintenance or care. That is roughly 22 to 32 years OF GETTING FREE ELECTRICITY with the sunlight as your source!

The inverters (DC to AC) last between 10 to 15 years .  All these components are under warranty for a certain number of years.

The secret of inverters or NO inverters:
Replace all your equipment with DC (Direct Current) appliances and you get rid of the inverter. Solar panels produce DC. But DC appliances are hard to come by and expensive.

Section II

Off-Grid Solar Electric Systems

Off-grid systems are solar electric systems that are not tied up to the grid and are capable of sustaining their own electrical loads without the assistance of electric companies. This means YOU RUN ALL  YOUR HOUSE OR BUILDING ELECTRICAL TOTALLY FROM YOUR SYSTEM AND YOU ARE NOT TIED UP TO MERALCO!

This independence and self sustainability is achieved using back up power. Small wind power or windmill driven generators, diesel generators and batteries are the most common back up power.  I choose batteries as more reliable sources of back up power. 

They are very efficient , quiet, have minimum maintenance and very low cost to run. They are also powered up or charged by the solar panels during the day.  The batteries ‘give back’ the power to you at night when solar are not producing , through the same inverters that convert the DC produced by solar panels. The batteries which  are DC sources, convert your DC power to house AC.

Note: The cost analysis above is typical of small (low kw) systems for residentials . As your system gets bigger into the hundreds of Kilowatts to  MW(million watts) level , the price of the systems drop.

Solar power systems , whether installed on your roof or backyard, your farm , will produce power where you set it up. It has no ‘ electrical generators’ that have too many moving parts that break down, it makes no noise, very light and portable , scalable in size from the smallest power source to charge your cell phone, cook your food in the middle of the desert, power up your tv on the mountain, all the way up to the huge Multi-Megawatt systems that power up whole cities or province. No other electrical power source can even come close to this versatility.

And that includes its financial advantage over the rest of the power generating lot. It truly makes perfect sense to go solar.


Joe Joson
Communications, Marketing, Consulting
Lim Solar Philippines 
Mendoza Solar , LLC -California/Nevada Corporation

Emails:

Linked Profile:


Facebook Profile:


Websites:















Friday, August 24, 2012

Netmetering

Netmetering is simply this:  After you have acquired your Solar Power System for your house, business building , commercial facility..... netmetering is your ability to buy power from and sell power to your utility company like Meralco using your BI-DIRECTIONAL ELECTRIC METER.  This awesome meter reads incoming power that you 'borrow from' Meralco and the outgoing power that you SELL to Meralco.

This system allows you to make your MONTHLY BILL EQUAL TO ZERO PESOS at the end of the month! HOW?  The number of solar panels are computed to produce the amount of power equal to or BIGGER  than the power you use every day INCLUDING non production time like night time where solar panels get some sleep while we sleep. The panels simply produce more during the day and send it out to Meralco  which Meralco sells to other customers for a price  with a PROFIT!

Come night time, you simply withdraw the power you 'sold' to Meralco. In effect , you just used Meralco as a convenient power storage.  You make money, Meralco makes money.  Your cheaply generated power HELPED drop the total kwhr rate for your neighbors to whom Meralco sold your power to for a price 'hopefully' is lower than power produced by other means or sources.

Please click here to see DOE's rendering of Netmetering.


Joe Joson
Communications, Marketing, Consulting
Lim Solar Philippines 
Mendoza Solar , LLC -California/Nevada Corporation

Emails:

Linked Profile:


Facebook Profile:


Websites:












Guide To Limitless Clean Energy

This is a great read. While the article in PDF refers a lot to the UK, it applies to the whole industry of renewables anywhere in the world.

Please click here for the FULL article.


Joe Joson
Communications, Marketing, Consulting
Lim Solar Philippines 
Mendoza Solar , LLC -California/Nevada Corporation

Emails:

Linked Profile:


Facebook Profile:


Websites:








Saturday, August 4, 2012

The Residential Solar Economics Basics


To view below article in its Word format , please click here:

This article was written to give us a basic idea just how much  residential solar panel electrical systems cost.  Not a problem.  Below is a truly basic presentation of how much your system will cost with a BONUS detailed math on why these systems make a lot of sense financially. 
                             
Section I

ON-Grid (Grid Connected Solar) – Your Solar power is connected to and interacts with the local Elec Company such as MERALCO, ETC.

A.                The Electrical Consumption and Expense

Example:
Kwhr of electricity used   600 kwhr/month
Basic (Ave rate)                Ph 9.24/kwhr
Total Elec Bill                    Ph 5,544/month

B.                 The solar electric system needed to ELIMINATE  the expensive bill.

Solar System Needed   3500 watts (3.5kw)
Solar Panel Size 240 watts /panel
Solar Panels total  15
Solar Inverter size   - 4kw
Space needed to install  25 square meters
Load KG  292

C.                 Funding, necessary to acquire the system.

Loan Total   P225,658.00/41pesos =$5503.00
Loan Interest 8%
Amortization in years 15
Monthly  P2197=$54

D.                Day One of System in FULL OPERATION, the SAVINGS start :

1.                   Your electric meter starts to run BACKWARDS which means your system ,AS DESIGNED, produces more power than you are using. You are NOT using any electricity from Meralco.  Panel size and number are designed to produce a total kwhr more than you use during the day.
2.                 The excess power generated by the solar panels are ‘SOLD’ BY YOU to Meralco, through Netmetering.
3.                 At night time the panels DO NOT PRODUCE ELECTRICITY.  You then ‘BUY BACK’ the power from MERALCO.
4.                 In effect you simply used MERALCO as your FREE ‘STORAGE’ of electricity PRODUCED  BY YOU, during the day so you can get it back at night. 
5.                 At the end of the month , your electric bill is Zero Pesos .  And it is by LAW that you can do this if you have solar panels on your roof and you have Netmetering approved according to the Law.
 
Now, let us look at the rest of the excitement:

You used to pay P5544 per month for your electricity. Now your bill is zero. Your monthly payment to the loan is P2197 per month. Looks like a monthly windfall of P3347!

Being a smart guy that you are , you sink half or more of the windfall into the loan. Your amortization years (number of years you pay into the loan)  drop according to your aggressiveness in paying off your loan. 

Let us say you ‘killed’ your loan in 7 years. 
Day one after pay off of your loan is freedom day!  Your electricity from day one of year 8 is FREE.

Solar panels are known to last 30 to 40 years with the least efficiency loss and least maintenance or care. That is roughly 22 to 32 years OF GETTING FREE ELECTRICITY with the sunlight as your source!

The inverters (DC to AC) last between 10 to 15 years .  All these components are under warranty for a certain number of years.

The secret of inverters or NO inverters:
Replace all your equipment with DC (Direct Current) appliances and you get rid of the inverter. Solar panels produce DC. But DC appliances are hard to come by and expensive.

Section II

Off-Grid Solar Electric Systems

Off-grid systems are solar electric systems that are not tied up to the grid and are capable of sustaining their own electrical loads without the assistance of electric companies. This means YOU RUN ALL  YOUR HOUSE OR BUILDING ELECTRICAL TOTALLY FROM YOUR SYSTEM AND YOU ARE NOT TIED UP TO MERALCO!

This independence and self sustainability is achieved using back up power. Small wind power or windmill driven generators, diesel generators and batteries are the most common back up power.  I choose batteries as more reliable sources of back up power. 

They are very efficient , quiet, have minimum maintenance and very low cost to run. They are also powered up or charged by the solar panels during the day.  The batteries ‘give back’ the power to you at night when solar are not producing , through the same inverters that convert the DC produced by solar panels. The batteries which  are DC sources, convert your DC power to house AC.

Note: The cost analysis above is typical of small (low kw) systems for residentials . As your system gets bigger into the hundreds of Kilowatts to  MW(million watts) level , the price of the systems drop.

Solar power systems , whether installed on your roof or backyard, your farm , will produce power where you set it up. It has no ‘ electrical generators’ that have too many moving parts that break down, it makes no noise, very light and portable , scalable in size from the smallest power source to charge your cell phone, cook your food in the middle of the desert, power up your tv on the mountain, all the way up to the huge Multi-Megawatt systems that power up whole cities or province. No other electrical power source can even come close to this versatility.

And that includes its financial advantage over the rest of the power generating lot. It truly makes perfect sense to go solar.


Joe Joson
Communications, Marketing, Consulting
Lim Solar Philippines 
Mendoza Solar , LLC -California/Nevada Corporation

Emails:

Linked Profile:


Facebook Profile:


Websites:















Friday, April 13, 2012

Our New Lim Solar Philippines Website and May 2012 Visit

As part of our efforts to bring solar energy to the Philippines we have recently launched our new website for Lim Solar.  This website will continue to evolve as we eliminate glitches, add new ideas and keep up with the rapidly expanding solar industry.

The CEO, Mr. Mendoza, California March 2012
Please click here to view our new website.  It is also accessible by clicking the Lim Solar page above.

Mr. Mendoza is scheduled to be in the Philippines around mid-May this year for a couple of weeks to meet with prospective clients in the Mindanao, Cebu, Bicol Region and Manila area.

If interested in attending the presentations, please contact us below:


Winston L. Mendoza - CEO

Mendoza Solar LLC
Cell Phone 714.299.7204
714.741.3977 Toll Free: 888.821.5469
FAX 714.784.7617
License# 183326
Skype Name : PMWENT

Corporate address: 10956 Sidney Pl. Garden Grove, CA. 92840



            http://limsolar.blogspot.com

Facebook Pages:   https://www.facebook.com/pages/Mendoza-Solar/214844821860947?sk=wall

                                                                              AND
           
                             https://www.facebook.com/pages/Lim-Solar/207991419297269?sk=wall


Saturday, March 10, 2012

Dire Power Shortages in Mindanao Now and in the Very Near Future

As costs of producing electricity skyrocket due to many factors, we are witnessing a corresponding difficulty in our local power producers to meet the increasing demands of an expanding economy and community power needs. Below story from Philstar is reposted here to show just one example of this predicament. 

The problem does not exist in Mindanao alone. It is nationwide and it is worldwide. India and China are the two additional oil guzzlers that eat up this increasingly very expensive energy source.

Solution: Solar Power. The only power source that is FREE TO HARVEST. Your investment now pays off in 5 to 7 years. With the shelf life of solar panels stretching into 30 - 40 years, it is  a real NO-BRAINER to invest in it now.

Longer power outages loom in Mindanao
PhilstarPhilstar – Wed, Mar 7, 2012
DAVAO CITY, PhilippinesMindanao is set to experience longer blackouts, particularly with the onset of summer, due to the island’s continuing power shortage.
Mindanao is largely dependent on hydroelectric power generated mainly from Pulangi River in Bukidnon and Lake Lanao in Marawi City, whose water levels have gone down beyond normal.
The National Grid Corporation of the Philippines (NGCP) has already implemented load curtailment as early as two months ago with the shortage in supply of hydroelectric power.
The load curtailment will allow the NGCP to still distribute power to different utilities in Mindanao but this will still be inadequate, resulting in power outages of up to 18 hours a day in some parts of the island.
Former senator Juan Miguel Zubiri earlier warned of “catastrophic” blackouts, as Mindanao’s power deficit has deteriorated to 10 percent of peak system demand versus only five percent a week ago.
“This implies that the previous two- to four-hour daily blackouts in many parts of Mindanao have started to worsen to four- to six-hour outages,” Zubiri said.
Malacañang has vowed to meet with power stakeholders and local government officials in Mindanao to address the lingering power shortage.
As of yesterday, the NGCP placed Mindanao’s gross power deficit at 154 megawatts, as the island only had a system capacity of 1,099 MW as against its actual peak of 1,253 MW.
As of March 2, Zubiri, citing NGCP figures, said Mindanao’s gross power deficit stood at 124 MW, with peak system demand of 1,244 MW and available generating capacity of only 1,120 MW.
Last Feb. 24, the island’s power deficiency stood at only 67 MW, he said.
“We are appealing to the Department of Energy to find ways to avert the further deterioration of Mindanao’s already harsh power deficit,” Zubiri said.
Even if the government manages to temporarily plug Mindanao’s 124-MW shortfall, he said the island still faces the risk of prolonged blackouts due to lack of standby power, or gross reserves.
“We have a generating capacity deficit. We do not only have enough power to meet peak daily requirements, we also do not have any extra supplies needed to kick in once a power plant conks out for any reason, or is shut down for preventive maintenance,” he said.
Zubiri earlier warned of crippling eight-hour daily blackouts in Mindanao when the weather heats up by April, if the island’s massive power deficit is not addressed.
In a letter to Energy Secretary Jose Almendras, Zubiri urged the provisional deployment of additional power barges to boost supply in the affected areas.
He also sought the use of the P2-billion ($ 45million USD) renewable energy trust fund to grant perks to entities willing to bring in new biomass, solar, wind, hydro, geothermal and/or ocean power supplies, exclusively for Mindanao, in six to 18 months.
Zubiri is the author of the Renewable Energy Law of 2008 and former chairman of the Senate committee on environment and natural resources.
Zubiri also batted for the energy sector’s retention in the Investment Priorities Plan of the Board of Investments, in order to attract fresh capital needed to quickly beef up Mindanao’s power supply. – With Roel Pareño - By Edith Regalado (Philstar News Service, www.philstar.com)


Reposted:  Joe Joson  Mendoza Solar, LLC / Lim Solar , Philippines


Contact us at: 


Joe Joson :  blackhawk74@yahoo.com


Winston L. Mendoza - CEO

Mendoza Solar LLC
Cell Phone 714.299.7204
714.741.3977 Toll Free: 888.821.5469
FAX 714.784.7617
License# 183326
Skype Name : PMWENT

Corporate address: 10956 Sidney Pl. Garden Grove, CA. 92840

Website:  WWW.MENDOZASOLAR.COM or


            http://limsolar.blogspot.com

Facebook Pages:   https://www.facebook.com/pages/Mendoza-Solar/214844821860947?sk=wall

                                                                              AND
           
                             https://www.facebook.com/pages/Lim-Solar/207991419297269?sk=wall


Saturday, February 11, 2012

Winston Mendoza, CEO, Mendoza Solar, LLC Contact Information

Winston L. Mendoza - CEO

Mendoza Solar LLC
Cell Phone 714.299.7204
714.741.3977 Toll Free: 888.821.5469
FAX 714.784.7617
License# 183326
Skype Name : PMWENT

Corporate address: 10956 Sidney Pl. Garden Grove, CA. 92840

Website:  WWW.MENDOZASOLAR.COM or


             http://limsolar.blogspot.com/

Facebook Pages:   https://www.facebook.com/pages/Mendoza-Solar/214844821860947?sk=wall

                                                                              AND
           
                             https://www.facebook.com/pages/Lim-Solar/207991419297269?sk=wall

Monday, January 30, 2012

Lim Solar A Philippine Corporation Now Open For Business

Solar Power is here to stay! As the prices of manufacturing PV (Photo Voltaic cells) continue to go down, electrical production using solar power expands at a rate that has brought the industry on par with electrical production using conventional methods as with diesel generators etc.

Lim Solar is a Philippine Corporation whose parent company Mendoza Solar has a great vision for the renewable energy needs of the island nation, the Philippines.

The 3030 by 2020 Plan:  This plan means simply this; by the year 2020 , electrical power costs would have been reduced 30% starting with the first 30% or 100MW (one hundred Mega Watts) of the President's 300MW projected installations under the Renewable Energy Act of 2008.

Click here to read the Renewable Energy Act of 2008 or RA 9513:  Renewable Energy Act of 2008 or RA9513

Lim Solar's Plan: This plan continues to evolve. This also show the details of the business model tailored to best fit the needs of the Philippine energy and industry needs.

Please click here to see the details:  Lim Solar Business Model for the Philippines

To contact us:


Winston L. Mendoza - CEO

Mendoza Solar LLC
Cell Phone 714.299.7204
714.741.3977 Toll Free: 888.821.5469
FAX 714.784.7617
License# 183326
Skype Name : PMWENT

Corporate address: 10956 Sidney Pl. Garden Grove, CA. 92840

Website:  WWW.MENDOZASOLAR.COM or


             http://limsolar.blogspot.com

Facebook Pages:   https://www.facebook.com/pages/Mendoza-Solar/214844821860947?sk=wall

                                                                              AND
           
                             https://www.facebook.com/pages/Lim-Solar/207991419297269?sk=wall

OR

Joe Joson

Cell: 714 348 2661