IREC, Vote Solar develop this new checklist to improve community solar design

community solar checklist

Two national organizations released a new checklist to help regulators and interested stakeholders evaluate and improve voluntary community solar across the country. The Interstate Renewable Energy Council (IREC) and Vote Solar developed the checklist to promote scalable and replicable community solar programs that benefit customers and communities.

“There are proven paths to success when it comes to developing robust community solar programs, and we urge regulators, utilities and other stakeholders to use this checklist as a resource to create low-cost consumer-centric offerings that actually give customers the solar they want,”  said Marta Tomic, community solar program director at Vote Solar.

Nationwide, over 220 utilities offer voluntary community solar programs across 36 states, yet the majority of these programs charge customers a premium for their subscriptions. Utilities are motivated to establish community solar for a number of reasons, including rising customer demand for renewable energy, providing economic benefits to low- to moderate-income customers and underserved communities, and diversifying the energy resource mix, among others.

Expand the growth of community solar with factory-direct systems

“As more utility-led programs are developed and refined, and as regulators are tasked with reviewing and approving such programs, this checklist provides a useful reference to guide successful community solar programs that benefit customers,” said Sara Baldwin Auck, IREC’s regulatory program director.

The checklist is meant to inform and guide voluntary utility-led community solar program design. The goal is for existing and future programs to adopt replicable and scalable elements that focus on customers and support meaningful participation and solar deployment.

The resource expands on seven key principles and topics:

  • Expand customer access to clean energy
  • Offer tangible economic benefits for all participating customers
  • Identify ways to promote project development cost savings
  • Prioritize the customer experience
  • Promote competition
  • Optimize community solar to benefit the grid and the community
  • Complement existing programs

— Solar Builder magazine

[source: https://solarbuildermag.com/news/irec-vote-solar-develop-this-new-checklist-to-improve-community-solar-design/]


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