
California’s Top Ten Solar Cities
This week our friends at Environment California released a
new report ranking California cities by the amount of solar they’ve installed.
The good news?
“From Fresno to San Francisco and Clovis to Culver City,
solar power is becoming a mainstream technology throughout California,” said
Michelle Kinman, clean energy advocate with Environment California Research
& Policy Center and co-author of the report. “Solar power is booming in
California and with the right leadership we can continue to benefit from the
cleaner air and local jobs that this industry inevitably brings.”
The state has doubled its solar capacity in just two years,
with 1 GW of rooftop solar today – the equivalent of two traditional fossil
fuel power plants. And, most exciting, plenty of that growth is happening in
cities and towns that you might not typically associate with clean energy . . .
City Solar
Capacity By
Capacity # of
Installations Rank by
Installs
San Diego 37
1 4,507 1
Los Angeles 36 2 4,018
2
San Jose 31
3 2,733 3
Fresno 22 4 2,146
5
San Francisco 17 5 2,405
4
Bakersfield 16 6 1,643
6
Sacramento 16 7 1,119
10
Santa Rosa 14 8 1,467
7
Oakland 10
9 1,010 11
Chico 9 10 615
19
Clovis 8 11 1,133
9
Roseville 3
84 1,170 8
Huge congrats to San Diego for topping the list! As Mayor
Sanders said: “San Diego didn’t become the state’s No. 1 solar city by
happenstance; it was the result of local policies and programs that encourage
investment in solar power.” Good work, we say.
Chico, Woodland, Rancho Cordova, Livermore and Petaluma
ranks top for “mid-size cities.” Sonoma, Auburn Oroville, Healdsburg and Newman
have the most solar installed per capita in the “large town” category. And of
the state’s “small towns,” Herald, Edwards AFB, Lebec, Maxwell, and Middletown
rank highest.
Our own Executive Director Adam Browning added: “Solar used
to have a reputation of being for the hip and hippy. This analysis shows that
solar is benefiting all Californians–solar’s just as much Fresno and Chico as
it is Santa Cruz and Sebastopol. People all across the state are lowering
utility bills and creating good jobs by tapping into the sun.”
Governor Jerry Brown has called for expanding California’s
solar market to 12 gigawatts by 2020. To date, more than 60 elected officials
statewide have endorsed Governor Brown’s vision. Vote Solar, Environment
California and allies are advocating that local and state leaders continue to
push big policy initiatives to continue expansion of one of California’s strongest
markets. First and foremost is ensuring that Californians continue to have
access to net metering – the policy that allows a homeowner or business to
receive a credit on their electric bill to offset electricity usage during the
night.
It may sound wonky but net metering has delivered tremendous
benefits to the Golden State:
California’s solar industry employs more than 25,000
workers. Solar job growth has been ten times higher than the overall economy,
providing a rare bright spot during the recession.
Solar has driven $10 billion in private investment in the
state over the past 5 years, making it a real economic engine.
Cash-strapped public agencies will save $2.5 billion in
electricity costs of the next 30 years by going solar. Schools alone will save
$1.5 billion.
Rooftop solar has reduced the need for California ratepayers
to invest in expensive and polluting peak generation and the transmission
infrastructure needed to carry it.
Local solar business innovation and scale that has effectively
driven costs down and made solar more accessible to more Californians. Since
2009, 2/3 of California’s home solar installations have been in median income
zip codes.
And as we see in today’s report, those installations are
happening all over the state. California’s stable, transparent, long-term net
metering policy has been key to its solar success. Help us urge state lawmakers
to continue support for rooftop solar and net metering here.
Vote Solar is a non-profit grassroots organization working
to fight climate change and foster economic opportunity by bringing solar
energy into the mainstream.
No comments:
Post a Comment