On Green, a truly 'green' evergreen

CORNWALL — By this weekend, the Christmas tree on the Green in Cornwall Bridge is expected to dazzle with 2,000 colorful lights.

Drivers who travel on routes 7 and 4 will no doubt appreciate the holiday cheer, even if they don’t realize that it’s not the electronic extravagance it might appear to be. For those in the know, part of the joy is in knowing the soaring spruce is green in the energy-saving sense.

Last winter, when it was clear the old light sets needed to be replaced, the Board of Selectmen and Highway Department Supervisor Rick Stone pulled together an approach to not only switch to strings of energy-sipping LED lights, but also to set up a solar panel to power them.

There was uncertainty as to the amount of sunlight the panel, located near the ground next to the tree, would get during December. Would it be enough to keep the tree lit for a few hours every evening?

It turned out to be a big success, even getting the attention of officials in Hartford. It is  believed to be the first solar-powered municipal Christmas tree in the state.

This year, the borrowed batteries used to store the collected energy were replaced. The $350 cost is less than what the town used to pay for power from the grid to light the tree each year. The three batteries are expected to last seven years.

At the Dec. 7 board meeting, the selectmen spoke of the research they did last year to compare their yuletide energy-efficiency efforts. They discovered the Cornwall Bridge tree is not the tallest one that is lit with solar-powered lights. It can’t compete, for example, with the tree at Rockefeller Center. This year’s 75-foot Norway spruce is the third New York City holiday tree to be lit with LED lights — some 30,000 of them. Prior to that, it would typically use in one day the power an average household uses in a month. That tree’s power now comes from the largest privately owned rooftop solar array, with 363 solar voltaic panels that cover the roof of 45 Rockefeller Plaza.

First Selectman Gordon Ridgway said the 2,000 lights on the local tree combined, use the power of a single 100-watt light bulb.

“We may not be the biggest solar tree, but we are doing our part,� he said.

And Selectman K.C. Baird added an inspired thought: “We have the largest uncut tree.�

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