Community solar
New Jersey’s Board of Public Utilities hopes to double the state’s solar capacity in five years even as it cuts some subsidies.
Community solar developers in New York are facing a very different set of market challenges from the ones they experienced over the last five years.
New York legislators have passed a bill that would connect downstate customers with upstate community solar projects by allowing cross-utility crediting.
D.C.’s Solar For All program has put panels on the roofs of 200 low-income single-family homes and launched 130 community renewable energy facilities.
New Jersey's BPU is studying which is most effective at attracting & keeping community solar subscribers: sending 2 separate bills or 1 “consolidated” bill.
The Rhode Island PUC rejected a proposal from National Grid to remove barriers for low-income customers to access clean energy.
A plan to build small community solar projects and reduce electric bills for some low-income residents in Nevada is facing pushback from consumer advocates.
Sustainable CUNY held a webinar to discuss the different ways New York City is making solar power available to low- to moderate-income residents.
The California Energy Commission allowed the Sacramento Municipal Utility District to sell solar power as an alternative to solar panels on new homes.
FERC denied a request by SMECO to rehear a petition asking it to rule that Maryland PSC's community solar program runs afoul of PURPA.
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