Solar coops – P2P Foundation https://blog.p2pfoundation.net Researching, documenting and promoting peer to peer practices Thu, 22 Feb 2018 11:55:28 +0000 en-US hourly 1 https://wordpress.org/?v=5.5.15 62076519 A Permanent Community Energy Cooperative model to fight climate change and wealth inequality https://blog.p2pfoundation.net/a-permanent-community-energy-cooperative-model-to-fight-climate-change-and-wealth-inequality/2018/03/04 https://blog.p2pfoundation.net/a-permanent-community-energy-cooperative-model-to-fight-climate-change-and-wealth-inequality/2018/03/04#respond Sun, 04 Mar 2018 11:00:00 +0000 https://blog.p2pfoundation.net/?p=69912 Eunice Kwon: Three years ago we set out to make it possible for communities to own their energy. And boy did we run into some strange things along the way! Before introducing those peculiarities, first some background: If people could own their energy, they’d be more secure – both financially and infrastructurally. We could save money and... Continue reading

The post A Permanent Community Energy Cooperative model to fight climate change and wealth inequality appeared first on P2P Foundation.

]]>
Eunice Kwon: Three years ago we set out to make it possible for communities to own their energy. And boy did we run into some strange things along the way!

Before introducing those peculiarities, first some background: If people could own their energy, they’d be more secure – both financially and infrastructurally. We could save money and increase our ability to bounce back after natural disasters by producing clean, decentralized energy in our own communities. If ordinary people could put their money toward renewables, instead of investing in fossil fuels on Wall Street, we’d also speed up our response to climate change.

Wall St to Cooperative St

But as we began working toward this vision for community-owned renewable energy, strange things started turning up. We found that you can’t share power with your neighbors even if your roof could produce enough solar power for the both of you. And it’s legally very difficult to pool resources to build and access energy from a neighborhood solar project. Ultimately, most people aren’t able to access local solar energy because they are renters, have poor credit scores, or don’t have enough sun exposure on their roof for solar panels.

The law prohibits sharing!

Stranger yet, there is a lot of money incentivizing solar for some people, but not as much for low to moderate-income households. Solar tax credits are available for homeowners and wealthy investors, but what about everyone else?

We’ve been working to address those strange things. For example, thanks in part to our advocacy, it’s now at least possible to develop shared solar energy projects with your neighbors. Unfortunately, because of opposition from entrenched interests, it’ll cost a premium for most people to take advantage of that policy. But while there are barriers to sharing energy, we believe we have found a path forward with a new legal model: the Permanent Community Energy Cooperative.

This model allows everyone to join a cooperative that strives for permanent access to and control of renewable energy for all of its members. We recently were awarded a grant from the California Energy Commission through the CalSEED program to further develop this model. Exciting! It may be just strange enough to work! If you’d like to learn about some our stranger thoughts behind it, check out this cartoon.

Our Power!

Let us know if you want to learn more and stay informed on community energy updates — such as jobs or volunteer opportunities, social events, and hopefully one day, memberships in an energy cooperative.

We haven’t been spooked by the strange things we’ve run into — we’re energized by the emerging opportunities and hope you are too!

Photo by National Renewable Energy Lab

The post A Permanent Community Energy Cooperative model to fight climate change and wealth inequality appeared first on P2P Foundation.

]]>
https://blog.p2pfoundation.net/a-permanent-community-energy-cooperative-model-to-fight-climate-change-and-wealth-inequality/2018/03/04/feed 0 69912
3 Steps to Building Just Transition Now with a Permanent Community Energy Cooperative https://blog.p2pfoundation.net/3-steps-to-building-just-transition-now-with-a-permanent-community-energy-cooperative/2017/05/09 https://blog.p2pfoundation.net/3-steps-to-building-just-transition-now-with-a-permanent-community-energy-cooperative/2017/05/09#respond Tue, 09 May 2017 08:00:00 +0000 https://blog.p2pfoundation.net/?p=65208 By Subin Varghese, Community Renewable Energy Director Step 1. Start now Don’t wait. That’s rule #1 for living in a world where we’re already feeling the impacts of climate change; millions of lives and livelihoods are at risk — or stand to benefit from solutions — in this and future decades. We needed a just... Continue reading

The post 3 Steps to Building Just Transition Now with a Permanent Community Energy Cooperative appeared first on P2P Foundation.

]]>
By Subin Varghese, Community Renewable Energy Director

Step 1. Start now

Don’t wait. That’s rule #1 for living in a world where we’re already feeling the impacts of climate change; millions of lives and livelihoods are at risk — or stand to benefit from solutions — in this and future decades. We needed a just transition of our energy economy yesterday. And while there are challenges to universal access and equitably shared benefits from clean energy, there are steps we can take today to start building projects, jobs, and improved health in local communities.

rule_one.jpg

Step 2. Appreciate the puzzle, and don’t let barriers stop you

As we described in our Community Energy Puzzle post, community-owned renewable energy has the potential to expand opportunities for ordinary citizens to put their money toward community-controlled energy facilities so neighbors can share in both electricity and the economic, social, and health benefits of clean energy. However, because our current legal system favors the wealthiest sectors of society, it’s not legal in most states to share electricity from solar panels with your neighbors, and it’s almost impossible for renters, nonprofits, or cooperatives to benefit from the tax incentives that exist to promote solar and wind energy projects.

Our team has spent two years mapping the legal landscape of community-owned energy, and we have not found a community-owned energy model in the U.S. that appears to be scalable. Existing successful projects provide much to learn from, but also benefit from unique regulatory environments, financing opportunities, the wealth of higher income communities, or institutional support that may not be available to most communities. Further, we’ve uncovered legal barriers in the realms of securities, tax, and utilities regulation. Combined, those barriers prevent ordinary people from 1) putting money into, 2) receiving tax benefits from, and 3) directly purchasing energy from their own renewable energy projects. From this exploration, we hatched an idea: the Permanent Community Energy Cooperative.

energy_puzzle.jpg

Step 3. Build today and plan for tomorrow

Based on our research of existing models and legal barriers, we’ve come up with an energy development and ownership model called the Permanent Community Energy Cooperative (PCEC), a scalable model that gives communities permanent access to and control over their power.

The model’s key innovation is to leverage existing, but little-known, collective finance mechanisms for cooperative entities. Initially, PCECs will be more like energy investment cooperatives than consumer cooperatives. Until laws change, members may not be able to receive energy directly from the cooperative, so the PCEC will have a built-in and legally enforceable adaptation mechanism to enable members to receive energy when regulations make it viable. Meanwhile, as described below, a PCEC can drive energy development by meeting other essential needs for members: 1) money, 2) community, 3) good jobs, and 4) a just, sustainable, and secure future.

1. Divestment and Investment Opportunities:

The PCEC provides a rare opportunity for low- to moderate-income people to invest in their local community and earn a modest return. In 2015, our team drafted and passed a California bill that essentially legalizes equity crowdfunding for cooperatives. We believe the growing movement to divest from fossil fuels will drive community capital toward PCECs. By harnessing the consumer and investor dollars of ordinary people, we believe we can overcome barriers to community-owned energy, activate a demand-driven market transformation nationwide, and accelerate a just transition to renewable energy.

2. Decentralized Community-Building:

The model is designed to fuel project development by harnessing existing social connections and communities of interest. As with traditional “barn raising” and fraternal insurance societies, this strategy is tried and true. Food, drink, music, sports, and other social activities are built into the practical management of common resources around the world. In the energy context, pairing renewable development with social activity lends cohesion and commitment to project development.

Relatedly, the model will rely on a decentralized organizational structure. Each PCEC is designed to scale rapidly, in part because the financing model depends on building a large membership base. A decentralized structure can retain the tight-knit quality of communities by supporting people to come together in small groups and build community around launching each energy project. Decentralized organizations represent both innovation in organizational design (see the book “Reinventing Organizations”) and yet another tried, true, and timeless structure for human activity.

workforce_trustees.JPG

3. A New Workforce:

A decentralized, democratic, and mission-driven organization requires a particular kind of workforce. Each PCEC employee will be a steward of the cooperative’s mission, tasked with nurturing community projects and managing technical and administrative logistics. Governance among staff will be relatively nonhierarchical to remove inefficiencies of bureaucracy, place each worker in a position of direct accountability to community groups, and tap fully into workers’ intrinsic drive to push projects forward. Since PCECs are designed to scale, a PCEC movement could rapidly create jobs and fulfill a craving for meaningful and sustainable work for tens of thousands of new workers and create a path to transition workers in the fossil fuel economy.

4. Building Movements Toward a Rapid and Just Renewables Transition:

If investing opportunities, community-building, and good job creation are not enough of a driver for member engagement, then a desire for equity and sustainability may seal the deal. A PCEC is a vehicle for building a broad-based movement, setting into motion widespread renewables development, and ensuring that the transition to renewables enables communities to own and control their power in the long run.

coop_now_and_later.JPG

A PCEC can address many of the current barriers to community-owned energy:

Barrier PCEC Response
Sharing electricity is expensive or not legal -First build projects on the property of local nonprofits, cooperatives, or businesses that can take advantage of existing net metering programs

-Adapt to allow sharing when laws change

Nonprofit entities or low-moderate income customers are unable to benefit from the federal solar tax credit -Reduce costs by scale of project or include tax equity partners in development and ensure complete cooperative ownership in the long term
Securities regulations limit crowdfunding options -Crowdfund using cooperative memberships of between $50 – $1,000
Renters and low-income individuals can’t participate -Everyone can participate by investing in community energy via coop memberships, and by helping to spearhead project development

-Adapt to allow renters and low-income customers to share electricity when laws change

our_power.JPG

We believe the PCEC model represents a breakthrough and has great potential to be replicated by grassroots communities everywhere, particularly if we can demonstrate it with a successful pilot. A pilot can also catalyze policy change by demonstrating to lawmakers that current laws are preventing innovation and equitable development.

Permanent Community Energy Cooperatives are an opportunity to start healing the planet and communities today through equitable energy development. They’re also “fun-work” that can bring people together, create results to celebrate, and build stronger bonds for more resilient, thriving communities.


Subin Varghese is the Community Renewable Energy Director at the Sustainable Economies Law Center. Contact Subin at [email protected].

Photo by woodleworm

The post 3 Steps to Building Just Transition Now with a Permanent Community Energy Cooperative appeared first on P2P Foundation.

]]>
https://blog.p2pfoundation.net/3-steps-to-building-just-transition-now-with-a-permanent-community-energy-cooperative/2017/05/09/feed 0 65208