Kaleigh Harrison
Sunbolt, a manufacturer of work stations based in Pennsylvania with solar-powered outdoor charging processes, has joined the interlocal purchase system (Tips), a cooperative shopping network that uses more than 10,000 members of the public sector in the USA
By securing the approval as part of tips 25020101 for renewable energy and solar solutions, Sunbolt can now sell directly at schools, municipalities and parking departments via a paid channel. This eliminates a major hurdle in the introduction of renewable energies of the public sector: long, resource -heavy bid processes that often delay or discourage projects.
The cooperative model is also the competitive conditions for smaller districts and cities and offers you access to competitive prices that are usually reserved for larger buyers. For Sunbolt it opens the door for thousands of potential customers who would otherwise be difficult to achieve by conventional procurement.
Solar infrastructure for today's outdoor areas
The work stations of Sunbolt outdoors are built in such a way that they meet both sustainability and connectivity needs in rooms in which the conventional electrical infrastructure is not practical. The stations that correspond to the National Electrical Code standards enable users to charge laptops, tablets and phones without drawing the power supply from the network.
The demand for this type of infrastructure is growing when schools with learning outdoors experiment and cities in public spaces in digital areas. Transit hubs, campus quads and community parks are increasingly regarded as extensions of classrooms and jobs, which creates new expectations for access to reliable performance.
The complaint is twice for public authorities: visible sustainability obligations and operational savings. Each unit creates its own performance and lowers the energy costs and carbon emissions and at the same time avoids the installation costs of network connections.