Secure Futures Solar will install solar arrays at nine school campuses in Wise and Lee Counties in southwest Virginia.
In Wise County, solar power systems will be installed at four elementary and middle school campuses under a 20-year power purchase agreement (PPA), which is expected to save the school division $7.5 million over the lifetime of the solar equipment. In Lee County, five elementary, middle and high schools will host solar power systems under a 25-year PPA, expected to save $4 million in avoided energy costs.
Three campuses of Lee County Schools will also receive roof restoration services under the school division’s solar PPA.
Wise County represents the first “ambassador” project in a campaign known as Securing Solar for Southwest Virginia founded to install solar power, create well-paying clean energy jobs and establish a local solar power industry in the coalfield region of Southwest Virginia. The initiative, a partnership between Secure Futures and the Solar Workgroup of Southwest Virginia, has committed to installing five solar ambassador projects over a two-year period with a total generating capacity of 10 MW.
“We are pleased that the campaign has just booked its first two projects within days of each other,” said Anthony Smith, president of Secure Futures. “Going solar will help schools in Wise and Lee Counties save money on power that they can invest in their core educational mission. Both projects will also provide an on-ramp for local workers to the solar industry, the fastest-growing job creator in the United States today.”
The two school divisions will receive solar equipment at no upfront costs through PPAs. The solar projects will include services to support workforce development and will add lessons on clean energy to classroom curricula.
The Securing Solar campaign supports economic development for the coalfield region that is sustainable both financially and environmentally through a unique approach to seeding a solar industry based locally in southwest Virginia.
First, the campaign offers job training to help local workers qualify as certified solar installers through a partnership between Mountain Empire Community College and local vocational technology and high schools. Securing Solar will graduate newly trained solar installers directly into work on live projects in the local area (an approach called demand-pull).
Second, the campaign has started a local solar installation company, Lonesome Pine Solar, to employ the newly trained workers on projects developed by the Securing Solar campaign. Starting with Wise and Lee County Schools, the start-up company will continue to employ workers to complete future projects from Securing Solar. Once the campaign is completed, Lonesome Pine will remain to provide on-site solar power to commercial and residential solar customers in southwest Virginia.
“We hope that momentum from our ambassador projects will stimulate demand for additional schools, hospitals, businesses and homeowners to go solar in Southwest Virginia and to consider Lonesome Pine as their first choice,” Smith said. “With enough activity, this locally based effort can generate more solar jobs and ripple out into local spending and investment that benefits the whole community.”
Recent changes to state law covering utility territories of Appalachian Power and Old Dominion Power have made distributed solar projects more viable in Southwest Virginia. Bills passed by the Virginia General Assembly lifted restrictions on net metering and made clear that public entities such as schools, town halls, libraries and landfills are allowed to finance solar projects through PPAs.