How Community Solar is Reducing Housing Cost Pains

It’s no secret that the U.S. is struggling with an historic housing shortage compounded by rising rents.

One meaningful – and increasingly popular – path to helping financially-strapped renters, homeowners, and businesses is through community solar programs.

Unlike single family homes where rooftop solar is more feasible and financially beneficial to the homeowner, renters don’t have the option of exploring their own solar installations.

This is where community solar programs enter the picture. As the name suggests, community solar acts as a kind of solar energy collective enabling community members – renters, businesses, and homeowners unable to mount rooftop solar – to subscribe (for a small monthly fee) for access to clean, renewable energy from nearby solar farms.

Net metering

Net metering enables community solar power generators to sell energy back to utilities. Community subscribers receive a discount for their share of that sale each month.

And unlike the really massive solar farms that are often located hundreds of miles from population centers, community solar farms (sometimes euphemistically known as ‘solar gardens’) are built directly adjacent to neighborhoods.

A Hefty Discount on Utility Bills

In the same way a homeowner with a rooftop solar installation can sell excess energy back to a utility through a process known as ‘net metering,’ community solar programs are able to sell much larger volumes of electrons back to local utilities.

In exchange, every subscriber receives a discount on their monthly utility bill through virtual net metering. These discounts can be particularly meaningful for renters living paycheck to paycheck.

It’s also worth noting that given the infrastructure involved, community solar is a far more sustainable option than its rooftop solar counterparts.

And in much the same way a renter isn’t saddled with the cost of repairs and maintenance to a home, subscribers to community solar programs are immune to similar costs for keeping the solar gardens working.

 

 

 

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