The jokes float. The engineering must be anchored.
SolarMarina.com is a manga comedy and clean-energy concept site. It is not engineering advice, legal advice, investment advice, permit approval, construction documentation, or permission to plug a Jet Ski into anything without qualified professionals and code-compliant design.
SolarMarina.com is concept storytelling.
SolarMarina.com is a creative manga comedy about a potential clean energy future on Catalina Island and every marina worldwide. The site uses fictional characters, humor, images, and concept writing to discuss real clean-energy themes.
The content is provided for general informational, educational, creative, and commentary purposes only. It is not a substitute for professional engineering, legal, permitting, environmental, financial, utility, maritime, electrical, fire-safety, construction, or insurance advice.
“No,” says Quarry Ojisan. “Hire engineers.”
Do not treat comedy panels as construction drawings.
SolarMarina discusses technologies that may involve high-voltage electricity, marine environments, batteries, solar systems, watercraft, docks, utility systems, public safety, and permitting. These areas require qualified professionals and site-specific review.
Not engineering advice
No page on SolarMarina.com is an engineering design, electrical plan, marine design, structural calculation, system specification, or installation instruction.
Not legal or permitting advice
SolarMarina does not determine whether any marina, harbor, dock, solar, battery, tide, gravity, or watercraft system is legally allowed or permit-ready.
Not investment advice
Nothing on this site is a financial projection, securities offering, investment recommendation, guarantee, bid, quote, or promise of savings.
Not utility approval
Utility interconnection, rates, tariffs, grid impacts, charging loads, and power systems require review by the appropriate utility and authorities.
Not maritime operating instructions
Electric towing, harbor valet services, docking procedures, shore-power support, and watercraft operations require trained operators and harbor-specific procedures.
The Permit Kraken is fictional. Permits are not.
SolarMarina mocks ridiculous process, but real projects still require serious approvals, engineering, inspections, environmental review, utility coordination, and safety compliance.
Electricity plus salt water is not a vibes-based activity.
SolarMarina discusses electric boat charging, shore power, battery systems, electric Jet Ski support, dock power, and clean marina electrification. These subjects involve real safety risks.
Any actual system must be designed, installed, inspected, operated, and maintained by qualified professionals using appropriate marine-rated equipment, grounding, isolation, GFCI/ELCI protection, interlocks, disconnects, load limits, emergency procedures, and all applicable codes and standards.
“The wiring cannot.”
Every shiny idea needs site-specific reality.
SolarMarina pages are intentionally imaginative. Actual feasibility depends on the site, utility system, permits, equipment, water conditions, safety requirements, environmental review, operations, maintenance, and cost.
Floating solar and solar-covered water
Requires reservoir operations review, environmental review, anchoring design, water-quality consideration, electrical design, access planning, and maintenance planning.
Batteries and solar-plus-storage
Requires fire-safety review, electrical design, siting, thermal management, monitoring, emergency procedures, utility coordination, and code compliance.
Gravity storage
Requires civil, mechanical, geotechnical, hydrological, environmental, electrical, utility, water-use, and safety review.
Tide-powered docks
Requires marine structural design, tide and motion data, navigation safety, habitat review, maintenance access, and harbor approval.
Electric boat charging and EV Jet Ski harbor valets
Requires marina operations planning, watercraft safety, tow procedures, insurance, operator training, marine electrical design, and harbor-specific approval.
Clean-energy facts change. The Permit Kraken remains annoying.
SolarMarina may discuss public facts, utility projects, energy technologies, regulations, and clean marina concepts. These topics can change over time. Information may become outdated, incomplete, or superseded by new rules, filings, agency decisions, equipment standards, or site conditions.
Do not rely on SolarMarina.com as the final source for current law, utility requirements, technical standards, equipment availability, permitting status, costs, or project feasibility.
“Verify before acting,” says Quarry Ojisan.
Concepts are not promises.
SolarMarina.com does not guarantee that any specific technology, marina concept, energy system, policy idea, permitting pathway, cost, savings, environmental benefit, power output, or project result will be achievable at any particular location.
No feasibility guarantee
Every site requires its own engineering, economics, permitting, environmental review, and operational analysis.
No savings guarantee
Energy costs, utility rules, rates, incentives, grants, equipment costs, and operations can change and must be reviewed separately.
No approval guarantee
No page on this site guarantees approval by a harbor, city, county, state, utility, fire authority, environmental agency, marina, or other authority.
No safety guarantee from reading
Reading a SolarMarina page does not make any system safe. Safety comes from qualified design, installation, inspection, operation, and maintenance.
Links and references are not endorsements.
SolarMarina.com may link to outside websites, public information, utilities, agencies, companies, or informational resources. External links are provided for convenience or context.
ABC Solar Incorporated does not control external websites and is not responsible for their content, accuracy, updates, policies, availability, or conclusions.
“Then read carefully,” says Quarry Ojisan.
Do not improvise with boats, batteries, or the ocean.
If SolarMarina gives you an idea for a real marina, boat, dock, solar, battery, or clean-energy project, talk to qualified professionals before taking action. Start with the right people, the right permits, the right safety review, and the right drawings.
“Absolutely not,” says everyone.
Read the full site context.
The disclaimer works with the license, privacy, FAQ, technology, and contact pages.