Vermont’s Shelburne Museum will be fully powered by renewable energy when two new arrays constructed on museum property come online later this year.
Construction of the first phase of the project, a 500-kW array on land adjacent to the museum campus, was completed in December 2020. The second phase, a separate, smaller 150-kW array, south of the museum campus, is under construction and scheduled to be complete in the fall. The museum partnered with Encore Renewable Energy of Burlington, Vermont, on the development, financing and construction of both solar projects.
“At Shelburne Museum we see our mission as not only focused on stewarding the museum’s renowned collections, buildings and gardens, we also believe that responsibility extends to our impact on the planet,” said Shelburne museum director Thomas Denenberg. “This solar project is an important step in our ongoing commitment to sustainability.”
The museum will purchase the net-metering credits generated by the systems at a discount, resulting in significant reductions in electricity expenses over the 25-year life of the project.
“Shelburne Museum’s sustainability commitment only furthers its stewardship mission,” said Chad Farrell, founder and CEO of Encore Renewable Energy. “We are proud to have played a role in making Shelburne Museum one of the few museums in New England to be completely solar-powered.”
In addition, Encore and the museum partnered with Bee The Change, a non-profit based in Weybridge, Vermont, devoted to supporting pollinators through plantings in solar fields. The ground beneath the two sites is being planted with pollinator-friendly ground cover to support vital habitat for bees, butterflies, hummingbirds, moths and other insects critical to food security.
“We are impressed by the museum’s commitment to sustainability and stewardship,” said Michael Kiernan, co-founder of Bee The Change. “The Shelburne Museum site is perhaps the most beautiful spot we have had the opportunity to install a pollinator habitat. This habitat will be the embodiment of the museum’s mission and an opportunity to educate people about the critical importance of pollinators to the reproduction of flowering plants and all of the species who depend on their fruits and vegetable nuts and berries, including our own.”