Huntington Solar Co-Op Hoping to Gain Energy

A group of people in and around Huntington are joining together to try to make solar power a reality for their homes.

It’s a solar co-op. A group of residents from the Huntington community and the surrounding areas are using the power of a group to purchase solar panels. It’s not the first solar co-op in the state. Previous co-ops have been formed in Morgantown, Wheeling and Charleston. And solar co-ops are coming together in Beckley, Lewisburg and the Mid-Ohio Valley region of the state.

“I moved to a total electric home, so hot water, furnace, everything electric,” Brown said. So part of it was to bring down the price of my energy, and I’m really interested in environmental issues and sustainability so I wanted to do my part, I guess.”

That’s Cheryl Brown. She’s one of the members of the Morgantown co-op that got its panels in late 2015.

The co-op there was set up by the non-profit West Virginia Sun. They say their mission is to fight for the energy rights of people in the state and set up the co-ops throughout the state. Altogether, they’ve helped organize 13 different solar co-ops in West Virginia. Autumn Long is the solar co-op coordinator for WV Sun.

“Our co-ops work on the model of bulk purchase, so we’re able to pool our buying power as a group and it also benefits the installer because they get a number of jobs in the same location and the same time frame, so they’re able to buy in larger bulk and they can pass that savings on to the customers,” Long said.

The process begins after 20-30 people sign up to join the co-op and qualify, meaning they have a westward facing roof with enough space to handle solar panels. A purchasing committee group from the co-op will issue a request for proposals from area installers. Co-op members review the bids and choose a single installer to service all the homes in the group.

Then each individual member of the co-op will get an estimate from the installer on what it would cost for his or her home.

Jim Kotcon joined the Morgantown Co-Op. He says it was something he wanted to do for a while and then the co-op came along and helped him afford the panels. He has a 2,800 square foot house, with a 5 kilowatt system, which worked out to 20 solar panels on his roof. He paid just under $15,000, which as Long said is about the average for homes in the state. After tax credits other incentives, he thinks he’ll have his money back in 10-12 years. In Kotcon’s case, the system is set up to provide all the power his home needs.

Credit WV Sun
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Candice and Jim Kotcon had thier solar panels installed in November of 2015 as members of the Morgantown Co-op.

“We have a net metering arrangement with the local utilities so that in summer when we’re generating more than we need it bank credits, and then we use those up in the winter,” Kotcon said. “We still do have to pay a $5 month connection fee to stay connected to the grid, but on average that is pretty much the main electric bill that we have left.”

Sharon Slater, who lives in Culloden in eastern Cabell County, hears those numbers and gets excited about the prospects for helping her wallet and the environment. Slater’s ultimate goal is to rely on solar panels alone for her energy needs.

“But being in my late 60s, I’m really interested in being able to stay in my all-electric home where I have no access to natural gas,” Slater said.  

Autumn Long of WV Sun said many of the participants in each co-op have wanted to go with solar for a while, but are afraid of starting the process on their own. Long said of the few dozen in each co-op, only a limited number end up with solar panels. The price can be prohibitive and in some situations, the home may not be able to ultimately accommodate the panels.

Long said she hopes this is just the beginning of solar in the Huntington community.

“We really want to see solar take root in the Huntington area and as the ball gets rolling and people get more and more comfortable with this technology and seeing it on their neighbors’ homes and local schools and residences, it just becomes more and more mainstream and a fact of life, so it really gains momentum,” Long said.

The Huntington co-op will meet again March 30th as the co-op continues to find more members. So far, 54 people have signed up in the Huntington area, but only 14 have been approved for the process based on the roof assessment. 

Solar Co-ops Seeking Proposals from Solar Companies

  Solar coops in Wheeling and Morgantown are looking for proposals from solar companies to install panels on their homes.

Residents in Wheeling and Morgantown are banding together to buy solar panels in bulk discounts for their homes and businesses. So far there have been 73 sign ups into the Wheeling coop and 86 in Morgantown. Ben Delman from the organization that is facilitating the coops, Community Power Network,  reports that of those interested, about 24 homes in Wheeling and 50 in Morgantown are suitable for solar panels. Both co-ops will be open to new members through the summer.

WV SUN is sponsoring the Wheeling co-op with the Wheeling Green Table and the Morgantown co-op with the Morgantown Green Team.

The coops are also open to small businesses.

Delman says federal funding exists for small businesses in the form of loans and grants through REAP, the Rural Energy for America Program. The deadline to submit an application is the end of June. 

W.Va. Communities Band Together to Adopt Solar Co-Ops

As electricity rates continue to climb, some communities are coming together to try to offset their bills by harnessing the power of the sun. It’s still a pretty novel idea in West Virginia but communities in Fayette and Monroe Counties are forming solar co-ops to help make it happen.

Solar co-operative: a newer trend where communities are using their collective powers to navigate the world of solar energy.

Community Power Network

Anya Schoolman lives in Washington DC and when her son pushed her to go solar in 2007, she decided all the research and effort that went into it would be worth it if she was doing it for a whole neighborhood.

“So he went door to door with a flier and two weeks later we had 50 houses signed up and no idea what we were going to do,” Schoolman recalled. “The first group, it took us two years, we got 45 houses solarized.”

Schoolman said ever since then other neighborhoods have been coming to her, wanting to do the same thing.

She started, and became the executive director of Community Power Network. In the last year and a half the non-profit has helped 16 neighborhoods in DC, Maryland, Virginia, and now West Virginia pull together to make installing solar panels a more attainable goal.

Solar Co-Ops

How a solar co-ops work:

  • Join a co-op, or start one, for free.

Two communities in West Virginia, one in Monroe County and one in Fayette County, approached the Community Power Network. And each community has different ideas about how they want to go solar.

“We found out about this opportunity because we’ve been doing a lot of energy efficiency work, so we invited them here because we knew that Fayetteville would be an excellent place to find people who would be interested in this kind of thing,” said Ginger Danze of Fayette County.

  • Anyone who is interested signs up, for free.

About 27 residents are part of the solar co-op in Fayette County. Stiever and Schoolman met with community members to answer general questions and help community members make an informed decisions to best serve their solar needs.

  • There’s a competitive bidding process to choose an installer.

Schoolman and Stiever laid out and helped community members navigate through information about going solar, then they put a call out to solar installer for bids. Three companies responded with proposals (one from West Virginia, one from Maryland, and one from Ohio).

  • Whoever is chosen by the co-op does individualized site visits, and creates and offers custom designs to meet community needs.

Fayette County solar co-op’s decided to go with Ohio-based Appropriately Applied Technologies (AAT).

Myles Murray, the company’s president, said his proposal focused on quality materials to guarantee a maximum lifetime of the systems as well as other technical perks. But he said a key aspect of his proposal also focused on partnering with the community, hiring local contractors to install the systems.

  • Then you buy together in bulk, saving anywhere from 20-30 percent on cost of supplies and installation.

Both the Fayette and the Monroe County co-ops will accept any interested parties through September. The co-op members are slated to be outfitted with solar panels by the first of the year.

Some Solar Details

Community Power Network says $8,000 – 15,000 is a good estimate for an average home solar system today.

Incentives include:

  • A 30 percent federal tax credit – Simply put, the next time you file taxes, you can write off 30 percent of the total cost of installing solar panels. It’s an offer that may expire in 2016.
  • Net-meteringWritten into West Virginia’s law books: For every kilowatt hour produced, your bill is reduced by that amount. If you produce more than you use, you acquire credits that can be applied to future bills.

“The solar that you produce this year might be worth five or six hundred dollars,” Schoolman said, “but electric rates have been going up and up so that same amount of power that you produce five years from now might be worth 1000 dollars. So the cumulative savings you have from the power you generate is worth three, four, five times what the system actually costs.”

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