This article's lead sectionmay be too short to adequately summarize the key points. Please consider expanding the lead to provide an accessible overview of all important aspects of the article.(December 2018)
At the end of 2023, California had a total of 46,874 MW of solar capacity installed, enough to power 13.9 million homes in the state. California ranked as the highest solar power generating state in the nation, with solar power providing for 28% of the state's electricity generation.[2] The Solar Energy Industries Association predicts that California will increase its solar capacity by over 20,000 MW over the next five years, the second highest increase in solar capacity in the country behind Texas at 41,000 MW.[2]
The state government has created various programs to incentivize and subsidize solar installations, including an exemption from property tax, cash incentives, net metering, streamlined permitting for residential solar, and, in 2020, requiring all new homes have solar panels.
Utility-Scale Solar Power Plants in California. Gold marks denote PV power plants, while red marks represent solar thermal power plants. Size is proportional to total installed capacity.
The early to mid 2010s saw the sharpest increase in solar development.[3] By the end of 2013, California had 490 MW of concentrated solar power and 5,183 MW of photovoltaics capacity in operation.[4]
In 2014, the 550 MW Topaz Solar Farm became the new "world's largest operational" solar facility and went online in San Luis Obispo County, California. A second 550 MW facility, Desert Sunlight Solar Farm, went online in Riverside County in 2014, constructed by First Solar. In June 2015, the 579 MW Solar Star facility went online, becoming the new largest operational solar facility and making California host to the three largest photovoltaic solar facilities in the world.[5] There are several proposals for even larger facilities seeking regulatory approval in California, such as the 2.7 GW Westlands Solar Park.
In 2014, California led the nation in the number of homes which have solar panels installed, totaling over 230,000.[6] Many were installed because of the Million Solar Roof Initiative.[7]
In December 2017, the Solar on Multifamily Affordable Housing (SOMAH) program was approved by the California Public Utilities Commission. The program plans to allocate one billion dollars from the state's greenhouse gas cap-and-trade program to incentivize owners of affordable, multi-family buildings to install solar, with a goal of adding 300 MW of capacity by 2030.[8]
In May 2018, the California Energy Commission (CEC) required that nearly all new homes (both single-family and multi-family) under four stories be built with rooftop photovoltaic solar panels .[9] Developers can also receive approval from the CEC to subscribe new homes to local community solar generation.[10] In early 2020, the Sacramento Municipal Utility District (SMUD) was approved to provide community solar to new homes in Sacramento.[11][12]
Solar systems with battery storage are now much more valuable than systems without battery storage, mostly because new solar generation exacerbates the duck curve (varying power supply from traditional power plants).[14] Solar production causes fossil-fuel power plants to be turned down to minimum during the day, but when solar production stops in the evening peaker plants must quickly ramp generation by 5GW an hour to supply peak demand.[15] New solar generation only displaces other solar generation and increases the supply ramping needed by peaker plants, which is expensive for utilities.[16] Battery storage systems flatten the duck curve by storing solar and wind energy at non-peak hours and discharging it at peak hours. California's most recent net energy metering policy now incentivizes systems with battery storage more than solar systems with no installed storage.
Housing affordability is also a concern with this measure, an area where California already struggles greatly.[17] According to a 2017 survey conducted by the U.S. Census Bureau, 37.8% of California homeowners with mortgages are "cost-burdened," with housing costs exceeding 30% of the household income, and 16.3% face housing costs exceeding 50% of the household income.[18] The CEC predicts that the requirement of photovoltaic panels will increase the cost of a newly built single-family home by about $40 per month in extra mortgage payments, but eventually save about $80 on electricity costs.[19] The CEC released data showing that the system would more than pay for itself, however charitable organizations such as Habitat for Humanity have expressed their concerns as this will require the organization to receive additional donations to pay for the photovoltaic panels that the group would be required to install on every house it builds.[20]
Photovoltaics
In 2011, California's goal to install 3,000 MW of distributed generation by 2016 was expanded to 12,000 MW by 2020.[21]
California has more photovoltaics installed than any other federal state, and 48% of the U.S. total in 2010. For the first time in 2008 the installed photovoltaics exceeded the state's 354 MW of solar thermal (CSP).[22][23] There are plans to build over 15,000 MW of utility scale photovoltaic plants in California.[24] At the end of 2012, small systems of less than 10 kWp were averaging $5.39/W, and large systems of over 500 kWp were averaging $2.77/W.[25]
California has the technical potential to install 128.9 GW of rooftop solar panels, which would generate 194,000 GWh/year, about 74% of the total electricity used in California in 2013. This is environmentally desirable because it would conserve large swaths of desert by placing panels atop preexisting structures instead. However, this would supply three to four times peak midday demand, requiring output to be stored or exported on sunny days.[26]
The 400 MW Rexford solar farm in Tulare County (with 180MW/540MWh of energy storage) received a 15-year power purchase agreement in 2020, expected operational by 2023.[31]
The Desert Sunlight Solar Farm is a 550 MW solar power plant in Riverside County, that uses thin-film solar CdTe-modules made by First Solar. The plant was completed in December 2014.[32]
The Mount Signal Solar project was completed near the Mexican border in May 2014. The installed PV capacity of the solar farm amounts to 265.7 MW (206 MWAC).[34][35][36]
The Redwood Solar Cluster is a group of 4 smaller solar generating stations that amount to 100 MW located in Kern County. The final phase was completed in March 2018.[37][38]
The Maverick Solar Cluster is a group of 4 operational single-axis tracker photovoltaic power plants. The first part opened in Riverside County in January 2021. The group was completed in August 2022 at 620 MW dc and 457 MW ac, with a 50MW/200MWh battery energy storage system (BESS).[40] They are part of the larger Palen Solar Project.[41]
The Solar Energy Generating Systems, is a 361 MW (was 394 MW until 2014) parabolic trough concentrated solar power station located in the Mojave Desert completed in 1990.
The Genesis Solar Energy Project, is a 280 MW parabolic trough concentrated solar power station located in the Mojave Desert completed in 2013.
The Ivanpah Solar Power Facility, is a 392 MW solar power tower concentrated solar power station located in the Mojave Desert completed in 2014.
The Mojave Solar Project, is a 280 MW parabolic trough concentrated solar power station located in the Mojave Desert completed in 2014.
Total operational installed gross power is 1,313 MW (1346 MW until 2014). Production in 2015 was 2,309 GWh, 71.2% of U.S. total solar thermal generation.[47]
In 2012, the Bureau of Land Management gave priority status to 5 solar project proposals in California.[34] The 750 MW McCoy Solar Energy Project was proposed by NextEra, though only 1/3 of that wattage was ever installed. The remaining development of the project is currently[when?] on hold. The 100 MW Desert Harvest project has been proposed by enXco. The 664 MW Calico Solar Energy Project was redesigned by K Power but later abandoned.[49]
Generation
The Energy Information Administration (EIA) provides California electricity generation data from 2001. Below is a table of annual and monthly utility-scale solar generation, including thermal and PV generation, alongside the percentage of total annual CA energy generation and percentage of all US solar generation.
California utility solar generation vs. CA total generation & US total solar generation[50][51][52]
Year
% of generation
Utility-scale solar generation in California (GWh)
CA total
US solar
Total
Jan
Feb
Mar
Apr
May
Jun
Jul
Aug
Sep
Oct
Nov
Dec
2001
543
7
13
31
39
81
91
92
85
65
21
14
4
2002
555
11
24
44
46
58
96
86
75
53
31
28
4
2003
533
13
18
50
60
68
91
62
62
56
36
14
4
2004
569
12
10
53
56
81
88
82
73
60
33
15
8
2005
538
8
12
37
57
80
87
71
75
60
37
12
2
2006
495
12
19
32
51
69
68
60
81
53
32
15
3
2007
557
13
19
48
53
83
81
76
64
57
41
20
2
2008
669
12
28
56
71
76
100
90
85
73
46
21
11
2009
647
2
22
55
73
80
81
95
86
69
47
25
12
2010
0.4%
63.5%
771
2
21
51
75
106
121
117
105
86
39
34
14
2011
0.4%
48.2%
887
1
34
49
82
100
130
112
139
102
81
29
28
2012
0.7%
31.9%
1,382
4
36
88
128
176
219
191
152
148
115
72
53
2013
1.9%
42.8%
3,813
65
130
228
239
267
356
345
471
460
408
409
435
2014
5.0%
54.0%
9,932
358
409
711
842
978
1,085
1,000
1,095
1,072
969
809
604
2015
7.53%
59.5%
14,813
680
893
1,256
1,419
1,464
1,515
1,581
1,612
1,336
1,131
1,050
876
2016
9.5%
52.2%
18,807
716
1,195
1,316
1,545
1,924
1,851
2,167
2,145
1,911
1,609
1,389
1,039
2017
11.8%
45.7%
24,352
972
1,087
2,035
2,158
2,726
2,970
2,715
2,511
2,347
2,165
1,335
1,331
2018
13.7%
40.5%
26,986
1,242
1,751
2,005
2,509
3,024
3,253
2,814
2,837
2,689
2,124
1,505
1,233
2019
14.0%
39.4%
28,331
1,265
1,493
2,266
2,629
2,739
3,340
3,366
3,309
2,723
2,494
1,625
1,082
2020
15.0%
33.9%
30,271
1,534
2,074
2,031
2,561
3,395
3,388
3,824
3,181
2,498
2,297
1,936
1,552
2021
17.7%
30.2%
34,863
1,687
2,224
2,869
3,597
3,920
3,813
3,657
3,647
3,180
2,646
2,119
1,504
2022
19.2%
27.0%
39,320
2,098
2,474
3,242
3,651
4,218
4,456
4,288
3,987
3,466
3,221
2,387
1,832
2023
%
%
32,171
1,953
2,327
2,764
3,744
4,244
4,475
4,701
4,281
3,682
Beginning with 2014, the EIA has estimated distributed solar photovoltaic generation and distributed solar photovoltaic capacity.
Estimated Distributed Solar Electric Generation in California[50][53]
Year
Summer Capacity (MW)
Electric energy (GWh)
2014
2350
4,674
2015
3391.4
6,014
2016
5257.9
8,230
2017
6617.8
10,605
2018
7879.5
12,919
2019
15,162
2020
17,407
2021
19,828
2022
23,094
Milestones
On May 13, 2017, the California Independent System Operator (CAISO) reported that the state had broken a new renewable energy record, with non-hydro renewables providing 67.2% of the total electricity on the ISO's grid (13.5% was provided by hydropower). The ISO reported that solar was providing approximately 17.2% of the total electricity.
On March 5, 2018, at around 1:00 pm, utility-scale solar energy met 50% of California's total electrical power demand for the first time.[54]
On May 2, 2022, CAISO reported that California's electrical demand was met 100% by renewable energy sources for the first time. This was maintained for nearly 15 minutes. During this period, 12,391 of the 18,000 megawatts (68.8%) of demand were generated by PV systems alone.[55]
Government support
Exemption from property tax
Since 1980, the state government excluded solar installations as taxable improvements on a property.[56][57] This has resulted in many counties seeing no tax benefit from solar farm installations, with some like Kern County stating that they had lost $110 million in property taxes over a decade due to this policy.[56][57]
State legislators felt that the policy was necessary because otherwise the property taxes on solar farms would be four to seven times higher in California than neighboring states, and would thereby incentive all new development of solar to occur out-of-state.[56]: 1
Renewable portfolio standard
California's renewable portfolio standard (RPS) sets a minimum of renewable generation from load-serving entities in the state. The most recent RPS was set under senate bill 100 and went into effect January 1, 2019. SB 100 mandates that 60% of California's electricity will be generated by renewable resources by 2030, and 100% will be generated by carbon-free sources by 2045.[58] Much of this is expected to come from solar power.
According to a report by the California Public Utilities Commission (CPUC), California failed to meet the 20% renewables by 2010 target. In 2010, Southern California Edison produced 19.4% of its electricity from renewable sources, Pacific Gas and Electric Company generated 17.7% of the electricity it sold from renewable sources, and San Diego Gas & Electric generated 11.9% of its electricity from renewable sources.[59]
As of October 2020, California had 31,288 MW[2] of solar and 5,830 MW[60] of wind farms. California adopted feed-in tariffs, a tool similar to what Europe has been using, to encourage the solar power industry. Proposals were raised aiming to create a small-scale solar market in California that brings the benefits of the German market, such as distributed generation, which avoids the need for transmission because power is generated close to where it is used, and avoid the drawbacks such as excessively high payments that could become a burden on utility customers.[61]
California Solar Initiative
The California Solar Initiative is a 2006 initiative to install 3,000 MW of additional solar power by 2016. Included in it is the Million Solar Roof Initiative.[62] In 2011, this goal was expanded to 12,000 MW by 2020.[63] As part of Governor Arnold Schwarzenegger's Million Solar Roofs Program, California has set a goal to create 1,940 megawatts[64] of new, solar-produced electricity by 2016 – moving the state toward a cleaner energy future and helping lower the cost of solar systems for consumers. The California Solar Initiative has "a total budget of $2.167 billion between 2007 and 2016 and a goal to install approximately 1,940 MW of new solar generation capacity."
[65][dead link]
According to the CPUC, homeowners, businesses, and local governments installed 158 MW of solar photovoltaics (PV) in 2008, doubling the 78 MW installed in 2007, giving California a cumulative total of 441 MW of distributed solar PV systems, the highest in the country. As of August 2016, 4,216 MW have been installed in 537,647 projects. The average cost of systems less than 10 kW is $5.33/watt and $4.38/watt for systems over 10 kW.[66] Of these, 3,391 MW were rooftop solar in 2015.[67]
The CSI initially offered cash incentives on solar PV systems of up to $2.50 per AC watt. These incentives, combined with federal tax incentives, could cover up to 50% of the total cost of a solar system. The incentive program was designed so that the incentives would reduce in steps based on the amount of solar installed in each of 6 categories. There are separate steps for residential and non-residential customers in the territories of each of the State's 3 investor-owned utilities. As of July 2012, the rebates range from $0.20 to $0.35 per AC watt for residential and commercial systems and from $0.70 to $1.10 for systems for non-profits and government entities.[65]
There are many financial incentives to support the use of renewable energy in other US states.[68] CSI provides more than $2 billion worth of incentives to customers for installing photovoltaic,[69] and electricity displacing solar thermal[70] systems in the three California Investor-Owned Utilities service territories.
The program was authorized by the California Public Utilities Commission and by the Senate Bill 1 (SB 1):
Decision (D.) 06-01-024, in collaboration with the California Energy Commission, with the goal of installing 3,000 MW of new solar facilities in California's homes and businesses by 2017.
On August 21, 2006, the Governor signed SB1, which directs the CPUC and the CEC to implement the CSI program consistent with specific requirements and budget limits set forth in legislation.
Responsibility for administration of the CSI Program is shared by Investor-Owned Utilities:
Pacific Gas and Electric Company – PG&E customers;
Southern California Edison Company – SCE customers;
California Center for Sustainable Energy – SDG&E customers.
Residential installation starts in early 2007 fell off sharply in SCE territory because of the disincentives inherent in SB1, requiring time-of-use (TOU) tariffs, with the result that homeowners who install panels may find their electric bill increasing rather than decreasing. The governor and legislature moved quickly to pass AB1714 (June 2007) to delay the implementation of this rule until 2009.
California's net energy metering program incentivizes distributed solar generation and battery storage by compensating customers for excess energy they export to the electric grid. A consumer's excess solar generation is bought by the local utility at or below retail pricing when it is exported, allowing consumers to "store" their own generation in the grid to be used at any time.[71]
Net metering was first implemented in 1995 in the passing of Senate Bill (SB) 656, known now as NEM1.
Out of 38 states evaluated in a rating of state net metering policy in 2007, California was one of five states to receive an A.[72]IREC best practices, based on experience, recommends no limits to net metering, individual or aggregate, and perpetual roll over of kWh credits.[73] As California was rapidly approaching the 5% aggregate limit, a May 24, 2012, ruling by the CPUC clarified the calculation of the limit, and requested a report on the cost of net metering.[74][75] California subsequently uncapped the net metering program.[76] Typically states have raised or eliminated their aggregate limits before they were reached.[77] By 2011, 16 states including California received an A for net metering.[78]
In 2013, Assembly Bill (AB) 327 mandated that a successor to the existing NEM1, NEM2, should be adopted by the CPUC. NEM2 went into effect in SDG&E's service territory on June 29, 2016, PG&E's service territory on December 15, 2016, and SCE's service territory on July 1, 2017.[79] One of NEM2's key objectives was to ensure continued growth of distributed solar by removing the 1,000kW limit on new systems. While NEM2 continued to compensate customers with full retail pricing, it also included three charges: a one-time interconnection fee, non-bypassable charges that fund low-income customers, energy efficiency programming and other energy programs, and a time-of-use (TOU) rate.[80]
California's current net metering policy is outlined in the Net Billing Tariff,[81] known as NEM3, which went into effect April 15th, 2023.[82] The Tariff takes into account proposals from various parties, including a lookback study on NEM 2.0 and 1.0.[79] While in NEM1 and 2 customers received credits for energy exported and deducted those credits when importing electricity from the grid at a nearly 1:1 exchange, under NEM3 energy exports are now valued at the avoided cost to the utility — the wholesale price it takes the utility to produce energy. Credits are typically $0.05 per kWh, but when electricity demand is high it can spike up to $2.87 per kWh.[82]
California's net metering policy was rated 19th by Solar Reviews in 2021, California receives a B only because electricity credits include charges and don't pay at full retail rate but at marginal cost.[83]
Mandatory solar power in new homes
In March 2008, Culver City established the first in the nation mandatory solar photovoltaic requirement, which requires an installation of 1 KW of solar photovoltaic power per 10,000 square feet (930 m2) of new or major remodeled commercial building area.[84]
In March 2013, Lancaster, California became the first U.S. city to mandate the inclusion of solar panels on new homes, requiring that "every new housing development must average 1 kilowatt per house."[85]
In May 2013, Sebastopol followed suit, requiring new buildings include either 2 W/sq ft (21.7 W/m2) of insulated building space of photovoltaics, or enough to provide 75% of the expected annual electricity use.[86]
Since January 1, 2014, California law requires all new buildings less than ten stories tall be "solar ready".[87]
In April 2016, San Francisco mandated that all new buildings less than ten stories tall include solar panels or solar water heating covering at least 15% of the roof, beginning January 1, 2017.[88]
In 2018, the State of California Building Standards Commission approved solar installation requirements for all new residential buildings with three stories or fewer. This requirement took effect in 2020.[89]
Streamlined permitting
California governor Jerry Brown signed a streamlined permitting bill (AB 2188) for residential solar systems on September 22, 2014. AB 2188 has four major provisions designed to reduce red-tape associated with local solar permits and requires that, by the end of September 2015, all California cities and counties must "adopt an ordinance that creates an expedited, streamlined permitting process for residential rooftop solar energy systems of less than 10 kilowatts in size."[90]
Research and industry reports project the bill could reduce the cost of installing a typical residential solar system in the state by over $1,000.[91]
Alameda County solar financing
Using a 20-year property assessment known as PACE financing, the city of Berkeley had a successful pilot program from 2008 to 2009 as the first city in the country to allow residents to obtain solar power without any initial payment. In the plan, property owners paid as much in increased property taxes as they save in energy costs, allowing them to install the panels for free at no cost to the city. Thirty eight projects were installed for the pilot stage of the program.[92] PACE financing has spread to 28 states, but is on hold in many due to objections by Freddie Mac and Fannie Mae, including in Berkeley (which has not continued the pilot as a result). Legislation has been introduced to require acceptance of PACE financing.[93]
City of Los Angeles feed-in tariff
The City of Los Angeles Department of Water and Power initiated a program on January 11, 2013, to pay up to 17 cents/kWh for electricity generated by up to 100 MW of solar power in a feed-in tariff program.
20 MW is reserved for small projects of less than 150 kW each. The program could be expanded to 150 MW in March.[94]
Year
Available
2013
40 MW
2014
40 MW
2015
20 MW
Tier
Available
Small systems
Feed in tariff
1
10 MW
2 MW
17 cents/kWh
2
25 MW
5 MW
16 cents/kWh
3
50 MW
10 MW
15 cents/kWh
4
75 MW
15 MW
14 cents/kWh
5
100 MW
20 MW
13 cents/kWh
State challenges with solar power
Energy storage is becoming a more prominent issue because photovoltaic solar panels can only generate electricity during daylight hours and thermal solar installations can only store energy for up to 10 hours, leaving a window in which the state's energy production must be generated from other sources (natural gas, wind, coal, or nuclear). To remedy this, different sorts of power storage solutions have been proposed such as batteries, compressed air, and ice generation.[95]
Another issue is overproduction which is most common during the spring months, when electricity production from wind power is high, but demand from heating and cooling is low.[97] California's solar production was so vast that by 2017, California had to pay Arizona and other states in the region to accept some of its electricity during peak production hours to provide relief to its grid.[98]
California also has aggressive goals when it comes to zero emissions vehicles (ZEVs), and the most prominent type is the electric car, which relies on grid power to charge its battery. Plug-in hybrid cars are also very popular in the state. These types of vehicles add to the demand and burden placed on the electrical grid, which was not designed to support the larger electrical loads required by electric vehicles.[99] One potential solution is to bypass most of the grid with the installation of rooftop solar panels for daytime charging and making use of home energy storage at night. Some electric companies will also provide discounted rates for car owners who charge their vehicles at night when demand is lower. Some cars can be programmed to stagger their charging cycle throughout the night. This leads to a steady rate of charging instead of a large spike in the early evening when most commuters return home.[100]
Public opinion
The majority of Californians in desert country support large-scale solar development, according to a 2012 survey conducted on behalf of BrightSource Energy. The survey of more than 1,000 people was conducted throughout Imperial, Inyo, Kern, Riverside, San Bernardino counties in California, where many utility-scale solar projects are underway or planned. Survey results showed that nearly four out of five (almost 80 percent) people strongly supported development of solar power in their communities. The survey also found that the majority of people were concerned with climate change. It also found that two-thirds of respondents think renewable energy is important to California's future and that the state and federal government should help provide incentives for renewable energy projects.[101]
^Cohen, Josh (January 8, 2018). "California Will Spend $1 Billion on Low-income, Multifamily Solar". Next City. Archived from the original on March 13, 2018. Retrieved September 15, 2019. California is ready to spend $1 billion over the next decade on rooftop solar installation for low-income residents. In December, the California Public Utilities Commission (CPUC) approved the creation of the Solar on Multifamily Affordable Housing (SOMAH) program. Funded by the statewide greenhouse gas cap-and-trade program, it will provide $100 million in annual solar installation incentives for the owners of affordable multifamily buildings.
^"Electric Power Monthly"[1] |title=Electric Power Monthly (February 2019 with data for December 2018) - Table 6.2.B. Net Capacity from Solar Photovoltaic retrieved 2019 3 17
^ abcAnderson, Mark (September 21, 2022). "Newsom signs solar construction tax exemption extension". Sacramento Business Journal. California has extended a property tax exclusion for new solar energy systems to incentivize the construction of large-scale solar plants to meet the state's electrification goals. Gov. Gavin Newsom signed Senate Bill 1340 on Sunday, continuing a property tax exclusion for new solar systems until the end of 2026. ... The exclusion continues what has been California law, in some form, since 1980.
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الفيروس المضخم للخلايا معلومات عامة من أنواع فيروس موجه للعصب الإدارة حالات مشابهة فيروس هربس بيتا البشري 5 تعديل مصدري - تعديل اضغط هنا للاطلاع على كيفية قراءة التصنيف الفيروس المضخم للخلاياCytomegalovirus أجسام ضمنية داخل نواة خلية رئوية مصابة بالفيروس المضخم للخلاي...
Томас Соренсен Томас Соренсен Особисті дані Повне ім'я Томас Ловендаль Соренсен Народження 12 червня 1976(1976-06-12)[1][2] (47 років) Фредерісія, Вайле[d], Данія Зріст 193 см Вага 89 кг Громадянство Данія Позиція воротар Інформація про клуб Поточний клуб «Мельбу...
MauleVII. RegionRegión del Maule Lage Symbole FlaggeFlagge WappenWappen Basisdaten Staat Chile Hauptstadt Talca Fläche 30.296,1 km² Einwohner 1.044.950 (Zensus 2017) Dichte 34 Einwohner pro km² ISO 3166-2 CL-ML Webauftritt goremaule.cl Politik Regionalgouverneurin Cristina Bravo Castro Partei PDC Lago Vichuquén in der Region MauleLago Vichuquén in der Region Maule -35.37169493-71.74037933Koordinaten: 35° 22′ S, 71° 44′ W Die Region Maule ist die VII. Regio...
Villa Vorster Grundriss Villa Vorster Die Villa Vorster ist ein 1891–1894 erbautes Wohnhaus in Köln-Marienburg, Unter den Ulmen 148. Als frühes Beispiel für den Haustypus des englischen Landhauses in Deutschland besitzt sie besonderen architekturgeschichtlichen Zeugniswert und steht unter Denkmalschutz. Inhaltsverzeichnis 1 Beschreibung und Geschichte 2 Weblinks 3 Literatur 4 Einzelnachweise Beschreibung und Geschichte Die Villa wurde von dem Berliner Architekten Otto March im englischen...
مجلس الاتحاد الأوروبي التأسيس 1 يوليو 1967؛ منذ 56 سنة (1967-07-01) البلد الاتحاد الأوروبي القيادة رئيس مجلس الاتحاد الأوروبي البرتغالمنذ 1 يناير 2021؛ منذ سنتين (2021-01-01) الأمين العام جيب ترانهولم ميكلسنمنذ 1 يوليو 2015؛ منذ 8 سنين (2015-07-01) الممثل السا...
بوبايان City مركز المدينة علم بوبايانعلم شعار اللقب المدينة البيضاء الاسم الرسمي بوبايان الإحداثيات 2°27′15″N 76°36′33″W / 2.45417°N 76.60917°W / 2.45417; -76.60917 الإنشاء يناير 13, 1537 تقسيم إداري البلد كولومبيا الإدارة كاوكا عاصمة لـ إدارة كاوكا الحكومة عمدة...
Creation of derived forms of a verb from its principal parts by inflection Not to be confused with Conjunction (grammar). Part of the conjugation of the Spanish verb correr, to run, the lexeme is corr-. Red represents the speaker, purple the addressee (or speaker/hearer) and teal a third person.One person represents the singular number and two, the plural number. Dawn represents the past (specifically the preterite), noon the present and night the future. Grammatical features Related to nouns...
Song about lost youth and romantic idealism For other songs, see Those Were the Days (disambiguation). Those Were the DaysA-side label of UK singleSingle by Mary Hopkinfrom the album Post Card B-sideTurn! Turn! Turn!Released30 August 1968[1]StudioEMI, LondonGenreFolk[2][3]Length5:05LabelAppleSongwriter(s)Boris FominGene RaskinProducer(s)Paul McCartneyMary Hopkin singles chronology Those Were the Days (1968) Goodbye (1969) Those Were The DaysSingle by Sandie ShawB-sideM...
Junior judge in British and other judiciaries This article needs additional citations for verification. Please help improve this article by adding citations to reliable sources. Unsourced material may be challenged and removed.Find sources: Stipendiary magistrate – news · newspapers · books · scholar · JSTOR (April 2022) (Learn how and when to remove this template message) Stipendiary magistrates were magistrates that were paid for their work (they rec...
Sabrina Salerno discographySalerno performing in October 2010Studio albums6Compilation albums7Singles28 Italian singer Sabrina Salerno has released six studio albums, seven compilation albums and 28 singles. Studio albums List of studio albums, with selected chart positions Title Details Peak chart positions AUS[1] FIN[2] FRA[3] SWE[4] SWI[5] Sabrina Released: 1987 Label: Five Records (ITA) Formats: LP, CD, cassette 113 4 24 — 11 Super Sabrina Release...
Sporting event delegationAngola at the2008 Summer OlympicsIOC codeANGNOCAngolan Olympic CommitteeWebsite (in Portuguese)in BeijingCompetitors32 in 6 sportsFlag bearer João N'TyambaMedals Gold 0 Silver 0 Bronze 0 Total 0 Summer Olympics appearances (overview)198019841988199219962000200420082012201620202024 Angola competed at the 2008 Summer Olympics in Beijing, China. This is a list of all of the Angolan athletes who qualified for the Olympics.[1] Athletics Main article: Ath...
Portuguese politician João Cravinho João Cardona Gomes Cravinho GCC (born 1936) is a Portuguese politician. He served, among other positions, as member of the Portuguese Parliament (1979–1983, 1985–1989 and 1999–2002), member of the European Parliament (1989–1994), and as the Portuguese Territory Administration Minister between 1995 and 1999.[1] He is a member of the PS political party. Cravinho has a degree in engineering. In 2004, after the eruption of several corruption s...
Afghan cricketer Asghar Afghanاصغر افغانAfghan in 2020Personal informationFull nameMohammad Asghar AfghanBornMohammad Asghar Stanikzai (1987-12-22) 22 December 1987 (age 35)Kabul, AfghanistanHeight5 ft 6 in (1.68 m)BattingRight-handedBowlingRight-arm medium-fastRoleMiddle order batsmanRelationsKarim Janat (brother)International information National sideAfghanistan (2004–2021)Test debut (cap 2)14 June 2018 v IndiaLast Test10 March 2021...
This article is about the film. For the book, see El Llano en llamas. 2008 American filmThe Burning PlainTheatrical release posterDirected byGuillermo ArriagaWritten byGuillermo ArriagaProduced byWalter F. ParkesLaurie MacDonaldStarringCharlize TheronKim BasingerJennifer LawrenceCinematographyRobert ElswitEdited byCraig WoodMusic byOmar Rodríguez-LópezHans ZimmerProductioncompaniesWild Bunch2929 ProductionsDistributed byMagnolia Pictures[1][2]Release dates August 29,...
Strategi Solo vs Squad di Free Fire: Cara Menang Mudah!