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Climate Change

The Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change (IPCC) is the United Nations body for assessing the science related to climate change. In their 2021 Working Group I Sixth Assessment Report, the IPCC states that the world has warmed by more than one degree Celsius or nearly two degrees Fahrenheit, and global temperatures are now higher than at any other time in human history. The repercussions of this global warming have already produced fiercer heat waves, more violent storms, and more frequent extreme weather events across the world. In the coming decades, the report warns, these extreme weather events will become commonplace, increasing in frequency and intensity.

With the increasing effects of climate change come risks to Heliolytics’ own operations. The increase in the severity and frequency of extreme weather will negatively impact our logistics and mobility. Natural disasters like severe precipitation, hurricanes, and wildfires reduce our ability to safely perform aerial inspections. As a result of increasing climate change,

As we scale our services to support larger volumes of solar energy production, we are scaling our contributions to the fight against climate change.

Heliolytics has seen a growth in the number of sites impacted by module inefficiencies and damage caused by extreme weather events.

Our solar lifecycle support services contribute to decreasing the World’s carbon emissions. When we are able to best identify inefficiencies across a solar module’s expected lifetime, we are helping our clients to increase the amount of clean energy they contribute to the grid. As we scale our services to support larger volumes of solar energy production, we are scaling our contributions to the fight against climate change.

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