Solamon Execs To Visit Solar Canada Trade Show; Seeking New Partners

(Toronto) - Solamon Energy CEO Graeme Boyce and SVP Christian Giles are set to attend CanSIA (Canadian Solar Industries Association) Solar Canada 2011 Conference, Canada's largest and most influential Solar Energy Conference, being held next week

(Toronto) - Solamon Energy CEO Graeme Boyce and SVP Christian Giles are set to attend CanSIA (Canadian Solar Industries Association) Solar Canada 2011 Conference, Canada's largest and most influential Solar Energy Conference, being held next week at the Metro Toronto Convention Centre. Boyce and Giles have set up meetings with several other attendees and seek new partners due to demands from clients.

" We are excited to see what new innovations our colleagues in the industry have been working on," says Boyce. "In an industry as progressive and rapidly changing as renewable technologies we at Solamon remain dedicated to providing our clients with the most up to date and innovative solutions available on the market today."

CanSIA is a national trade association that represents approximately 650 solar energy companies throughout Canada. Since 1992, CanSIA has worked to develop a strong, efficient, ethical and professional Canadian solar energy industry with capacity to provide innovative solar energy solutions and to play a major role in the global transition to a sustainable, clean-energy future.

Solamon provides its partners a fully managed solution called the Apollo Acre™, a turnkey process from beginning to end including site inspections, project design and development, as well as addressing requisite environmental and local permitting, 3rd party engineering, procurement and construction, as well as system testing and eventual commissioning, security and maintenance.

In the Caribbean, Solamon offers a ground-mounted solar array of integrated photovoltaic cells typically over a 5-acre package of land to produce 2MW of power each. The company also designs and installs custom solutions with local partners to provide roof-mounted and parking lot systems that could be augmented by micro wind turbine technology. In Central America, Solamon is developing 50-acre packages of land to supply 20MW of solar electricity, minimally, to the grid.

About Solamon: Solamon Energy Corp. sells integrated arrays of ground-mounted and rooftop photovoltaic cells. These solar power plants are connected by cable to varied transmission equipment, including converters, inverters and batteries, utilizing 5 acres of land per unit; each unit is called an Apollo Acre™. Additionally, it is expected the company's business activities will spin-off many jobs locally, given engineering requirements, construction, unit commissioning and subsequent maintenance.