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What is Community Solar? New Podcast Episode Sheds Light on Energy Justice.

This is the third in a series about episodes in season seven of Connect the Dots, the Center for Progressive Reform’s podcast on climate solutions. Subsequent posts will be posted throughout the summer.

Episode three, “Energy Justice and Community Solar Power,” takes listeners to North Carolina and reveals how community solar has the power to lower energy costs and increase energy reliability. Host Rob Verchick speaks with Ajulo Othow, who is a Board Member to the Center for Progressive Reform and the founder, CEO of EnerWealth Solutions. As a community-based organization, Othow’s company seeks to advance an ecologically sustainable world, where power is held locally and decisions are made democratically. Othow explains how distributed forms of solar, like rooftop panels or community solar, can promote energy justice and equity by allowing customers to own their own energy. 

Why North Carolina?

Between 2010 to 2020, solar energy surged from nearly zero to seven percent of the state’s energy mix. What’s more, a 2021 Environment America report ranked the state third nationally for solar energy production growth, most of it coming from utility-scale projects in rural areas.

However, the state’s primary utility company, Duke Energy, has exclusive right to sell power in its territories. As the state prepares a transition to clean energy, Duke Energy is likely to further marginalize overburdened communities with skyrocketing rates. 

While the state and Duke Energy have failed to propose an energy transition that is inclusive of and equitable for all communities, Othow and EnerWealth Solutions partner with rural community groups to advocate for better policy planning to ensure they are represented in the process. 

How it’s working

In the episode, Othow refers to one example in which a rural, predominantly Black town in North Carolina, serviced by the Roanoke Elective Cooperative, has partnered with EnerWealth Solutions to make energy rates more affordable. Roanoke Electric Cooperative and EnerWealth Solutions set up an array of solar panels locally and piloted a subscription program in which residents could opt in to receiving their energy from the solar panels. Based on residents’ subscription plan, they received a credit connected to the energy produced by the solar panels. This credit could later be used to reduce their electricity bill or could be put toward home energy efficiency improvements.

In addition to EnerWealth Solutions’ efforts, the Inflation Reduction Act of 2022 offers a tax credit for renewable energy generation to low-income communities. 

Equitable solutions to clean energy will allow all people to access affordable renewable energy. Community-based solar solutions are a means to achieving that. 

For all the details to this episode, subscribe and listen to Connect the Dots on your favorite podcasting platform, and be sure to subscribe to catch the next episode on a legislative climate win in Maine. 

For more content on Connect the Dots, visit us on Instagram (@progressivereform).

Showing 2,818 results

Father and adult son carrying a solar planel

Faith Duggan | June 29, 2023

What is Community Solar? New Podcast Episode Sheds Light on Energy Justice.

This is the third in a series about episodes in season seven of Connect the Dots, the Center for Progressive Reform’s podcast on climate solutions. Subsequent posts will be posted throughout the summer. Episode three, “Energy Justice and Community Solar Power,” takes listeners to North Carolina and reveals how community solar has the power to lower […]

Conor Klerekoper | June 29, 2023

The War on Organizing

Reeling from workers' gains during the New Deal and Civil Rights areas, future U.S. Supreme Court Justice Lewis Powell penned a memorandum that became the playbook for American corporations' domination over workers for the next five decades. He wrote that Big Business was under attack, and to counter what was becoming a more even distribution of gains for labor, industry must “assiduously cultivate…political power” and use it “aggressively and with determination.” Corporations across the country heeded Powell's call.

Brian Gumm | June 28, 2023

Leaning on Unproven Carbon Capture Technologies in Louisiana and Beyond

The federal Inflation Reduction Act and the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency's (EPA) most recent power plant rules are big wins for climate and the environment. However, they both have their shortcomings, and one of them is their reliance on carbon capture and storage technologies to reach ambitious climate emissions goals. As a new Center for Progressive Reform report shows, carbon capture technologies are unproven and pose significant risks, especially to communities in states like Louisiana that are already overburdened by pollution.

Daniel Farber | June 22, 2023

CEQ and Permitting Reform

In the recent debt ceiling law, Congress extensively revamped the National Environmental Policy Act (NEPA), the law governing environmental impact statements. An obscure White House agency, the Council on Environmental Quality (CEQ), will have the first opportunity to shape the interpretation of the new language.

Daniel Farber | June 20, 2023

The Drafting Puzzles of NEPA 2.0

Shortly after President Joe Biden signed the new National Environmental Policy Act (NEPA) rewrite as part of the debt ceiling law, I wrote a blog post about a major drafting glitch at the heart of the new provisions. Today, I’d like to follow up with more examples.

Youth activists protest outside

Faith Duggan | June 16, 2023

Connect the Dots Podcast Features Youth Transportation Justice Activist

When pollution from a neighboring freeway was seeping into the playground and classrooms of her middle school, Adah Crandall said enough was enough. She founded an Environmental Justice Club at her school and began protesting the freeway's proposed expansion, citing health hazards to children and an unsustainable future.

U.S. Capitol in the sunshine in late autumn

James Goodwin | June 15, 2023

Member Scholar Hammond Testifies on Just Transition Measures for Appalachia

Following all the partisan rancor on the Hill lately, yesterday’s hearing before the Subcommittee on Energy and Mineral Resources of the House Natural Resources Committee was a breath of fresh air. It focused on two important bills that can help Appalachian communities transition to a post-carbon economy in a way that addresses the harmful environmental […]

Shelley Welton | June 12, 2023

Net-Zero Emissions: Good Climate Science, Bad Climate Policy

The scientific concept of net-zero emissions has quickly become an organizing policy paradigm, enshrined in the Paris Agreement and manifested in thousands of “net-zero” pledges developed by countries, states, cities, and private companies. Collectively, these pledges now purport to cover more than 91 percent of the global economy. If this figure sounds too good to be true, that’s because it likely is. Net zero is anti-democratic, inequitable, and imperial. For related reasons that I focus on in this post, it is also unlikely to work as a strategy to achieve the collective global aim of net-zero carbon emissions.

Legislators celebrate inside a state chamber

Faith Duggan | June 9, 2023

Seventh Season of Connect the Dots Podcast Opens With Climate Win

Our first episode of Connect the Dots Season 7 — Climate Win: Maryland’s Climate Solutions Now Act— takes us to Maryland for a major legislative win and its key elements to success. Verchick spoke with the Center’s Katlyn Schmitt, a senior policy analyst who helped steer the Climate Solutions Now Act into law last year.