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Brenda

(1,089 posts)
Thu May 9, 2024, 05:53 PM May 9

Meet the Country's Solar Co-op Started by Preteens

This looks like an excellent program! I'm going to try and find/start a co-op in my area.

On Earth Day, celebrated on April 22, 2024, the Biden administration announced 60 recipients who received $7 billion in a solar power grant competition called the Solar for All program. The awardees were selected by the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) and the program will help bring residential solar projects to more than 900,000 households in the U.S.

The nonprofit Solar United Neighbors (SUN) worked closely with 12 applicants of the Solar for All program and will continue the process with grant recipients as funds are dispersed. In an interview with me for the Independent Media Institute on April 26, SUN’s communications director, Ben Delman, said that it had been an “exciting week” as their organization put significant work into the Solar for All program. He says this will “infuse money to local governments to help expand solar access” to low-income communities.


The project was started by two preteen friends who were moved to action after watching the documentary, “An Inconvenient Truth,” in 2007. Twelve-year-old Walter (the son of Anya Schoolman, SUN’s founder and executive director), and his friend of the same age, Diego, decided to go door to door in their neighborhood of Mt. Pleasant in Washington, D.C. In two weeks, the boys gathered about 50 neighbors together who also wanted to go solar. This was the foundation of Mt. Pleasant Solar Cooperative and the start of what would become SUN. From there, the kids—supported by Anya Schoolman—worked to get legislation passed to improve solar policies in the Washington, D.C., area.


SUN has created a video to explain the benefits of joining a local solar cooperative, and how joining a solar co-op is “free, and open to anyone” in a given designated co-op area. The Phoenix Metro Co-op, for example, is available to residents in Maricopa County, San Tan Valley, and Queen Creek.

Delman also shares that one of SUN’s focuses is on bringing solar access to rural areas, specifically via the Renewable Energy for America Program. This is a federal program run through the U.S. Department of Agriculture that provides both grants and loans to farms and rural small businesses wanting to adopt renewable energy systems.

https://www.truthdig.com/articles/meet-the-countrys-solar-co-op-started-by-preteens/

7 replies = new reply since forum marked as read
Highlight: NoneDon't highlight anything 5 newestHighlight 5 most recent replies
Meet the Country's Solar Co-op Started by Preteens (Original Post) Brenda May 9 OP
Solar Farm Oldtimeralso May 9 #1
Hey Oldtimeralso, I did not know that - here's an article about it Brenda May 9 #2
Link to map of President Carter's solar farm CoopersDad May 10 #6
Brenda, Think. Again. May 9 #3
Thanks my friend! Brenda May 9 #4
I wish you only the best of luck with it! Think. Again. May 9 #5
That's great LiberaBlueDem Monday #7

Oldtimeralso

(1,939 posts)
1. Solar Farm
Thu May 9, 2024, 06:01 PM
May 9

I thought that President Carter built a solar array on his farm in Plains and shares the power with the residents of the town. He is the best President in my 75 years, possibly ever!

Brenda

(1,089 posts)
2. Hey Oldtimeralso, I did not know that - here's an article about it
Thu May 9, 2024, 06:08 PM
May 9
https://people.com/politics/jimmy-carter-solar-panel-farm-powers-plains-georgia/
Published on February 21, 2020

Jimmy Carter Put Solar Panels on His Farmland and They're Now Powering Half of His Georgia Hometown

While Jimmy Carter was in the White House, he championed new energy and became the first president to use solar panels to power portions of the building. That legacy has continued decades later and in a place much closer to Carter’s home — literally: Since 2017, the nation’s 39th president has used 10 acres of his farmland to power most of his hometown in Plains, Georgia.

Where the famed peanut-farming president used to grow crops like nuts and soybeans, 3,852 solar panels now stand to capture the Georgia sunlight, providing more than 50 percent of the small town’s energy.


Edited to add:

Thanks Oldtimeralso for letting me know about this and a big THANK YOU to Jimmy Carter for everything you've done for people in Georgia and America.

Think. Again.

(9,084 posts)
3. Brenda,
Thu May 9, 2024, 06:45 PM
May 9

I am so thrilled that are thinkin about joining, or even starting from scratch, a solar co-op in your area!

How exciting!

There are quite a few examples of successful shared solar energy co-ops you might look into for inspiration and maybe even technical assistance, here's another article to get you started:

https://www.msn.com/en-us/money/companies/solar-co-ops-rise-as-a-solution-for-low-income-families-to-access-renewable-energy/ar-BB1m6yn5

Brenda

(1,089 posts)
4. Thanks my friend!
Thu May 9, 2024, 07:19 PM
May 9

Well ya know, I live in the Sun Belt and have always been astonished how few homes I see with solar panels.

Yeah, I live in a red state. This is not going to be easy.



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