When you have been involved in this industry for five decades, it’s hard to look at where solar energy is today -- compared to where it was in the 1970s -- and not be thankful.

But it hasn't always been an easy road for the institutions and individuals that have made solar their life work in the last half century, and many barriers still exist today. The decision to shutter the Arizona Energy Office earlier this year drives this point home in a personal way for me.

The Energy Office was a little-known government agency that received no state funding, but for more than 40 years it obtained and distributed more than $250 million in federal funds that had a lasting impact on the way Arizonans get and use energy. The Office focused on all forms of energy, not just solar.  But it was "in the place of Arizona," as John Yellott would say, that ideas were given life -- tested, proven and proclaimed for the world to see.    

I worked in the solar programs of the Energy Office beginning in 1987, and retired as its director in 2010. I am thankful to all the many people whom I worked with over the years, and while it is impossible to mention everyone, or all of the cutting edge projects and programs that started there, here are a handful of examples that stand out to me:

We all should be thankful for the efforts of the hundreds of people that worked in the Energy Office over the past 40 years -- I know I am.

Jim Arwood
Communications Director
Arizona Solar Center