In 1986 when the price of energy was temporarily cheaper and americans minds were less focused on environmental issues president reagan ordered the panels removed from the white house roof.
Why did reagan take the solar panels down.
Dirck halstead getty images.
Solar in the u s.
And it would take producing roughly a square meter of photovoltaic panels or the mirrors for a solar thermal system every few seconds for the next 40 years to harvest one terawatt of energy from.
They were taken down for.
Has yet to fully recover.
Reagan s political philosophy viewed the free market as the best arbiter of what was good for the country.
The average solar panel from the era produces approximately 1 05 kwh of energy every day.
Author natalie goldstein wrote in global warming.
That also meant no solar panels.
In 1986 ronald reagan removed the solar panels installed by jimmy carter from the white house.
Solar panels finally back on the white house almost 30 years after reagan removed them new 50 comments by nathan ingraham may 9 2014 1 50pm edt.
Seven years after the west wing roof party in 1986 the symbolic solar collectors met with roof repairs and they were never re installed.
This symbolic installation was taken down in 1986 during the reagan presidency.
President ronald reagan took office in 1981 and the solar panels were removed during his administration.
It was clear reagan had a completely different take on energy consumption.
Multiply by reagan s 32 solar panels and you get 33 6 kwh of clean energy every day for free.
Ronald reagan helped tear down the berlin wall and he also helped tear down the white house s solar panels.
In 1979 jimmy carter in a forward looking move installed solar panels in the roof of the white house.
In 1991 unity college an environmentally centered college in maine acquired the panels and later installed them on their cafeteria.
365 days a year 24 year that s 294 336 kwh of dirty energy bought and burned because of one bad decision by ronald reagan.
They were put in a warehouse in virginia and forgotten.