Examples of Community solar in a sentence
Community solar projects that are under precertification status under RCW 82.16.165 as of June 30, 2020, may not apply for precertification of that same project for the one-time low-income community solar incentive payment provided in this section.
Community solar projects: Five thousand dollars per project participant.
One key example of this is the Adjustable Block Program: that program previously featured three categories of projects (Small DG, Large DG, and Community solar), but changes to Section 1-75(c)(1)(K) now transition the ABP to six categories (with the addition of Public Schools, Community-Driven Community Solar, and Equitable Eligible Contractor categories), demonstrating more attention paid to the qualitative attributes of projects supported by or applicants to the program.
Buildings that submit a completed U.S. EPA Renewable Energy Ready Home Solar Photovoltaic Checklist (or other approved solar-ready standard) and associated documentation will be certified as a Model Community solar ready home, and are eligible for low-cost financing through Model Community’s EconomicDevelopment Authority.
Community solar programs vary and may increase your electricity bill or provide an electricity bill savings.
In the absence of a scavenger or with low scavenger concentrations, fragmentation could be described as a first-order reaction (Stachowski et al., 2021).
Community solar projects certified under this section must be sited on preferred sites to protect natural and working lands as determined by the Washington State University extension energy program.
Community solar facilities may, in total, generate electricity of 4% or less of single-hour peak load, but that amount does not count toward net metering; Electrical corporations can own half (max of 2%), which may be included in the rate base.
Description Community solar allows Maryland residents to purchase subscriptions for electricity produced from local community solar arrays, thereby gaining some of the same economic advantages as having solar modules directly on a residence while avoiding possible obstacles to participation in solar that may exist (e.g., roof age, property ownership, roof orientation, or shading).
Community solar projects that are in precertification status under the Production Incentive Program as of June 30, 2020, may not apply for precertification for that same project under the Community Solar Expansion Program that begins July 1, 2020.