Placeholder Image

Subtitles section Play video

  • (Cheery melody of bells and strings)

  • Secretary Moniz: Solar panels on the White House I think

  • are a really important message that solar is here.

  • We are doing it.

  • We can do a lot more.

  • I am very bullish on the future of solar energy as a key part

  • of our clean energy future.

  • James Doherty: The size of the array that we established here

  • is the typical size for the average American house.

  • Being at the White House, we do have some security concerns.

  • We can't cover the entire roof with panels,

  • though that would be good from an energy-saving standpoint.

  • (Laughter.)

  • Cyrus Wadia: Everything from the solar components to the inverter

  • technologies to the labor that put the panels on the roof

  • was all America.

  • Domestic source, domestic maintenance.

  • It serves as a symbol that America technology in solar is

  • available, it's reliable, and it's ready for millions

  • of Americans across the country.

  • James Doherty: So the first thing what we did was we drilled

  • down into the concrete and then basically epoxied a series

  • of threaded rods back up through the baton tops.

  • We then were able to install a series of grids for a

  • subassembly upon which the solar panels could then be secured.

  • Secretary Moniz: Clean energy revolution is not something

  • for the distant future.

  • It's happening right now and we want to capture that.

  • Cyrus Wadia: Every four minutes, some small business

  • or home owner is going solar.

  • In a sense, we're going through a transition here and the

  • industry is going through a transition that we're just

  • seeing the beginning of.

  • Minh Le: The President is basically doing what Americans

  • all across the nation are doing right now.

  • They're making the conscious choice to look for renewable

  • energy like solar as the cheaper, cleaner,

  • and preferred energy source for their homes and families.

  • Cyrus Wadia: You know, we need to diversify the clean energy

  • portfolio as articulated in the President's Climate Action Plan,

  • which we are actively engaged in now.

  • And we also need to spur the economic sectors of the future.

  • Last year alone we created over 23,000 new jobs in solar energy.

  • James Doherty: Obviously the more that we can install

  • renewable energy sources, the better off not just

  • the White House is, but the nation is and so is the

  • whole planet.

(Cheery melody of bells and strings)

Subtitles and vocabulary

Click the word to look it up Click the word to find further inforamtion about it

B1 WhiteHouse solar energy clean energy white house cyrus

Inside the White House: Solar Panels

  • 106 3
    稲葉白兎 posted on 2014/09/09
Video vocabulary

Keywords

climate

US /ˈklaɪmɪt/

UK /ˈklaɪmət/

  • noun
  • Typical weather conditions in a particular place
  • other
  • The general attitudes, feelings, or opinions that people have at a particular time.
  • other
  • A region with particular weather conditions.
  • other
  • The typical weather conditions in an area over a long period.
future

US /ˈfjutʃɚ/

UK /ˈfju:tʃə(r)/

  • noun
  • Time that is to come after the present
  • A prospect of success or advancement.
  • Events that will happen in the time after the present.
  • A contract to buy or sell something at a determined price at a specified time in the future.
  • The generations of people that will live after the present one.
  • A contract to buy or sell something at a determined price at a specified time in the future.
  • A prospect of success or happiness.
  • A verb tense expressing an action that has not yet happened.
  • The time or a period of time following the moment of speaking or writing; what will happen.
  • adjective
  • Existing or occurring at a later time.
  • Relating to a time that is to come.
  • That will exist or happen in the time after the present.
  • other
  • To plan or design for the future.
  • To envision or project into the future.
  • other
  • The time that will come after the present.
energy

US /ˈɛnədʒi/

UK /'enədʒɪ/

  • noun
  • Physical or mental strength
  • other
  • Power or capacity applied to perform a task in computing.
  • Resources used for power, fuel, etc., especially in economic terms.
  • Enthusiasm and determination.
  • The capacity to do work.
  • The strength and vitality required for sustained physical or mental activity.
  • The strength and vitality required for sustained physical or mental activity.
president

US /ˈprɛzɪdənt,-ˌdɛnt/

UK /ˈprezɪdənt/

  • noun
  • Person in charge of a country, or organization
  • The highest-ranking executive in a company or organization.
  • The highest-ranking executive in a corporation or organization.
  • The elected head of a republic or the chief of state in a country.
  • The person who holds the position of head of an organization, club, or society.
  • The chief administrator of a college or university.
action

US /ˈækʃən/

UK /'ækʃn/

  • noun
  • Something that a person or thing does
  • The fact or process of doing something, typically to achieve an aim.
  • A lawsuit.
  • verb
  • To act to do something
source

US /sɔrs, sors/

UK /sɔ:s/

  • noun
  • A cause or origin of something.
  • A book, article, person, or other resource consulted for information.
  • A person or place that provides information.
  • Piece of information; a person giving information
  • Place from which something necessary comes
  • A person who provides information, especially for a news report or investigation.
  • A place, person, or thing from which something can be obtained.
  • other
  • To obtain something from a particular source.
  • adjective
  • Produces or provides what is wanted or needed
  • verb
  • To get, e.g. a raw material, from somewhere
domestic

US /dəˈmɛstɪk/

UK /dəˈmestɪk/

  • noun
  • Someone paid to help with housework in your house
  • A person who is paid to help with cleaning and other jobs in someone's home
  • adjective
  • Tame and kept as a pet or on a farm
  • Existing or occurring inside a particular country; not foreign or international
  • British informal fight between husband and wife
  • Relating to the home, household, or family affairs
  • Concerning your own home or house
  • Relating to or made in your own country
  • Relating to one's own country
  • Relating to issues within a country
  • Made in one's own country
  • Concerning or made in your own country
transition

US /trænˈzɪʃən, -ˈsɪʃ-/

UK /trænˈzɪʃn/

  • noun
  • Change from one state, movement, place to another
  • verb
  • To change state, movement, place, or subject
  • other
  • To undergo or cause to undergo a process or period of transition.
nation

US /ˈneʃən/

UK /'neɪʃn/

  • noun
  • Area or region controlled by a government and army
  • A large body of people united by common descent, history, culture, or language, inhabiting a particular country or territory.
  • A community of people composed of one or more nationalities and possessing a more or less defined territory and government.
  • A large group of people of the same race, speaking the same language.
house

US /haʊs/

UK /haʊs/

  • adjective
  • Relating to a house or household.
  • noun
  • Place where a specific activity or business occurs
  • A building for human habitation, typically consisting of walls, a roof, and a door.
  • A business or firm.
  • A family, especially a royal family or noble family.
  • Building in which a family, person lives
  • A deliberative or legislative assembly.
  • The audience in a theater or cinema.
  • verb
  • To give someone a place to live
  • To contain or store something
  • other
  • To provide accommodation or shelter for.