Monday, March 21, 2016

As 'Tipping Point' Nears for Cheap Solar, Doors Open to Low-Income Families

A group of nonprofits lay out the solar landscape, hoping to promote ways for even low-income families to access clean energy.


New programs are trying to lower upfront costs so low-income families can also take advantage of rooftop solar. (Credit: Reuters) Click to Enlarge.
How low-income families can get access to affordable solar power is a question communities nationwide are increasingly confronting.  New solar policy guidelines released last week begin to deliver answers.

For the first time, a national overview is available via the Low-Income Solar Policy Guide, jointly produced by the nonprofit groups GRID Alternatives, Vote Solar, and the Center for Social Inclusion.  It explains the myriad challenges, benefits and opportunities for low-income families who go solar.

Policymakers, nonprofits, companies and community organizers are all looking for ways to improve solar access, said one of the report's authors, Sean Garren, a regional manager at Vote Solar.  "We pulled together the guide to try to catch this wave of interest and provide them the resources they need to turn it into concrete expanded access in low-income communities," he said.

But even as solar is expanding and getting cheaper, few options for buying or leasing solar panels are affordable for low-income families, Stan Greschner, vice president of government relations and market development at GRID Alternatives, told InsideClimate News.

"The number one issue is cost," said Greschner, noting that families don't have $15,000 to drop on a solar panel investment, or even the smaller deposits needed for leasing or renting panels.  They also probably don't have strong enough credit to qualify them for such programs.

Last year, more than 7 gigawatts of new solar capacity was installed in the United States and experts expect far more solar will come online in 2016.  At the same time, solar costs are plunging. For example, the average installed price for residential solar systems dropped 9 percent between 2013 and 2014.

According to the guide, the key is to develop policies and programs that target low-income families living in single-family homes and multi-family homes, as well as renters.

States that are already tackling the access issue include California, Colorado, Massachusetts and Washington, D.C.  For example, California has a policy to provide solar installations on the roofs of single-family and multi-family homes at no up-front cost to the users.

Meanwhile, Colorado has a program that ensures some low-income families can benefit from receiving solar power—and the related energy savings—from shared community solar arrays.

"Shared renewable energy is a nascent market" said Sara Baldwin Auck, regulatory program director at Interstate Renewable Energy Council.  Shared solar is growing rapidly and much more is anticipated, she said, and many states are in the process of passing new policies and programs to take advantage of it.  Last week, IREC released their own solar policy guide for low- and moderate- income families focused specifically on shared solar.

Read more at As 'Tipping Point' Nears for Cheap Solar, Doors Open to Low-Income Families

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