Solar Streetlights Keep Florida Bright Amid Hurricanes

Sunita Somvanshi

Solar streetlights kept neighborhoods bright when Hurricane Milton left 3.3 million Floridians in darkness.

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Built to handle 160 mph winds, these lights work for five days straight without seeing the sun.

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From Wesley Chapel to North Fort Myers, 8,000 Streetleaf lights stayed on through five major hurricanes since 2019.

Photo Source: Oleg Gorbunov (Pexels)

Smart tech spots problems before blackouts happen, keeping streets safe through the stormiest nights.

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America's biggest home builder D.R. Horton picked these solar lights for new neighborhoods across the South.

Photo Source: La Citta Vita (CC BY-SA 2.0)

Florida communities ordering lights before April 1 get storm-ready before hurricane season hits in June.

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Scientists found hurricane blackouts could jump 50% in ten years as storms get stronger.

Photo Source: NOAA (Picryl)

These lights already cut 2.6 million pounds of carbon pollution while keeping night skies darker.

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With 1,600 power stations facing flood risks, solar lights offer a lifeline during storms.

Photo Source: Klau1983 (CC BY-SA 3.0)