Canada. His company produces Tio-Coat, which is a titanium
dioxide-based product that includes some 40 ingredients, including Dow’s Rhoplex EC-3100, an all-acrylic polymer designed primarily for use in pigmented elastomeric basecoats.
Tio-Coat provides 89 percent reflectivity efficiency. “We took five
years to formulate the product, and wanted to raise the performance bar a bit,” he said. The coating can extend the life of a
sheet material by an estimated 10 years, he noted. Tio-Coat can
be applied to asphalt, concrete, foam or metal.
The Cool Roof Rating Council, of Oakland, Calif., maintains
a technical database of material properties on 1,000 products,
including reflectivity, and has rated materials as high as 94 percent, according to Jessica Clark, a marketing officer for the council. The U.S. Department of Energy’s Energy Star rating for
roofing material reflectivity requires 65 percent efficiency new,
with a 50 percent performance for worn materials. Most of the
interest in white roofs comes from the heat reflection of the surface, which reduces energy consumption for cooling.
At least two solar module manufacturers now produce solar
modules that can absorb reflected light. Sanyo North America,
based in San Diego, Calif., sells a double-sided flat solar panel,
the HIT Double, and Solyndra makes a cylindrical solar module, which absorbs across 360 degrees of reflection. Solyndra’s
cylinders yield 20 percent more power than a standard upward
facing flat solar panel, according to David Miller, a spokesperson
for the Fremont, Calif.-based company. The Sanyo panels increase the solar power yield by 30 percent, according to company information sheets.
The market for white roofs in California has been boosted by
a requirement that new commercial roofing be white, under Title
24 codes. Because Ontario has a 60 percent local content requirement for solar systems, Sanyo and Solyndra solar modules
are not likely to see great gains in the province. Accordingly,
DuROCK plans to open a California office within 60 days, and
has already had its product tested with Solyndra. “We laude the
foresight of California in requiring white roofs,” Ursini said.
In other news Schneider Electric announced it had secured a
contract with the United States Coast Guard (USCG) in Puerto
Rico to install 2.89 megawatts of solar panels on renovated
Coast Guard rooftops over a 13-month period.
The company says the rooftop solar rollout, part of its comprehensive $50 million energy savings performance contract
(ESPC) with the Coast Guard, will see electricity production of
more than four million kilowatt-hours per year.
Combined with new “cool roofs”, the solar power systems
will slash the annual cooling load of the buildings by 3. 9 billion
British Thermal Units, resulting in an overall reduction of utility-purchased electricity by an estimated 40 percent.
The cool roof measures included insulation, reflectivity and
improved drainage, with energy and operational savings offsetting the costs of implementation.
“Reducing the Coast Guard’s energy consumption and developing renewable energy solutions in Puerto Rico not only
helps the Coast Guard meet federal mandates, reduce green
house gas emissions and stabilize energy costs, but it also can
help create green collar jobs in Puerto Rico. This project will
have a significant impact on the industry there,” said Capt. John
Hickey, commanding officer of Coast Guard Shore Maintenance
Command in Seattle.
In new technology development coatings manufacturer
EPOX-Z Corp. recently introduced EPOX-Z NRG, a two-part
cool roof coating designed for use with PV installations on flat
commercial roofs. According to the company, the material provides a life span that parallels the typical length of a solar power
purchase agreement.
The solventless, odorless coating contains no volatile organic
compounds (VOCs) and can mitigate the damaging effects of
ponding water on flat commercial roof surfaces, EPOX-Z said.
The company offers a partner incentive program that allows
approved solar companies to earn an instant rebate if they partner with EPOX-Z. The solar company can either retain the rebate or pass the savings through to the customer. CW
What is a Cool Roof?
A cool roof reflects and emits the sun's heat back to the sky instead of transferring it to the building below."Coolness" is measured by two properties: solar reflectance and thermal emittance. Both properties are measured from 0 to 1 and the higher the
value, the "cooler" the roof.
Benefits of cool roofs include:
• Energy savings and global warming mitigation;
For more information visit The Cool Roof Rating Council (CRRC) on the web
at www.coolroofs.org.
30 | Coatings World
www.coatingsworld.com
September 2011