Solstice Is Pioneering the Gig Economy of Solar Panels
A new article from BostInno provides a look inside Solstice’s work to provide solar energy to the millions of Americans that have until now been locked out of the market.
A new article from BostInno provides a look inside Solstice’s work to provide solar energy to the millions of Americans that have until now been locked out of the market.
Sited in Otsego County, the project is expected to provide enough clean energy to power the equivalent of about 400 average-size homes per year.
The New York State Energy and Research Development Authority and Delaware River Solar announced the groundbreaking of a community solar garden in Otsego County.
“Every year, the organization selects 15 to 20 companies that best fit its mission of improving people’s lives and solving world challenges through innovative solutions.”
The projects will together account for up to two megawatts of additional clean energy production, enough to power approximately 350 underserved households.
“Among the projects funded…are Solstice Power Technologies, which connects users to free community-shared solar power.”
Ascent Conference put together a list of the 5 most electrifying energy startups. Solstice’s work toward affordable renewable energy made the list!
Elemental Excelerator announced today that it will invest up to $750,000 in Solstice Power Technologies to expand its community solar services to California.
Kelly Roache, Director of Inclusion at Solstice, helps explain how New York’s new distributed energy policy is impacting the community solar market.
Solstice Marketing Director Andrew Alayza highlights how greater contract flexibility and higher customer savings rates benefit developers and customers alike.
Solstice CEO Steph Speirs joins WIOX radio to explain how residents in Chenango, Otsego, Delaware, and surrounding counties can save 10% on their utility bill by enrolling in a community solar garden at no cost.
“A recent report from Bloomberg heralded a bold new milestone in the global transition to renewable energy: one trillion watts of installed solar and wind capacity worldwide. There’s just one problem.”