Am I the only one who is alarmed at the recent ruling in California that all new housing being built starting in 2020 will have to have solar panels installed?
It is probably reasonable to assume this will be done on the cheap with crappy components and with no regard or oversight as to the radiation consequences of this action.
While the time frame is tight it would seem prudent for us, local clubs, the ARRL and the FCC to get involved in this to make the installers adhere to a set of rules to prevent radiation.
Anyone have any input on this and suggestions on where to start?
While it is true that hams can't tell anyone that having solar power violates FCC laws. They (or a letter from the FCC) can tell them they need to fix a solar system that is causing interference. So, for example, if a housing tract gets built with SolarEdge components, SolarEdge will likely be called to do their twisted wires ferrite filter retrofit. I have seen them do this in about four hours per house and it almost completely eliminates the RFI from that neighbor.
The possibly good news is SolarEdge says they will start using new "optimizers" (these are DC to DC converters) that are clean in about one or two years. Maybe this will be in time for the 2020 projects. The bad news is SolarEdge will continue installing their systems using economical ham radio jamming wiring methods (a big loop antenna) until then. And unfortunately, SolarEdge systems seem to be the most popular now. As far as I have seen, other brands of solar power on neighbor's roofs don't RFI hams.
By the way, a SolarEdge engineer told me I should find more interesting things to do with my time than help other hams identify RFI caused by SolarEdge systems. I see his point. If hams don't know where the RFI is coming from they won't know who to complain to.