Yeah I'm a researcher, a biomedical engineer who does medical-oriented quantitative analysis for hospitals to reduce their costs and better prepare their departments to deal with the nature of the patients arriving. I don't just fix medical machines; I also deal with power distribution, medical wastes, and radiation safety. I didn't say I'm an electrical engineer who works for a generator distributing company.
vegetaleb wrote
Good! you said you are working in this field and you proved me right, you definitely have an interest in defending pollution of backup generators instead of promoting a 24/24 electricity, and also defending the pollution of trucks on mazout.
And for your modesty part...you are not in position to say pollution doesn't kill and doesn't do cancers, all the links I gave are purely medical, only doctors and medical researchers have the right to say so, not an electrical engineer who lives from backup generators controls with all due respect.
I am in a position to say that fuel oil doesn't contribute to developing cancer as much as other factors such as wastes, smoking, and exposure to chemicals, because again quantitative analysis.
As for the topic discussion on solar panels, we're installing them in a hospital now to help with power feed on backup generators because a) they are a cheaper solution to continuously buying diesel oil b) the power tower is rarely giving any electricity feed (thanks dawle, and it's not even stable) c) batteries can only last a specific period of time (usually the UPS lasts between 4 to 6 hours for a good setting). Mind you, it's not cheap (I also studied the potential of installing a small solar powered grid for the hospital owners' building, but it was unfeasible in terms of space and costs). I'll try to bring you the company's info next week.