1 / 17

Judith Lipp Executive Director, TREC November 2012

Insights from a solar co-operative. Judith Lipp Executive Director, TREC November 2012. A project of:. Contents. Intro to community power The SolarShare story (RE co-op model) Considerations for RE co-op development Other community power models. About TREC.

rafael-kim
Download Presentation

Judith Lipp Executive Director, TREC November 2012

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Insights from a solar co-operative Judith Lipp Executive Director, TREC November 2012 A project of:

  2. Contents • Intro to community power • The SolarShare story (RE co-op model) • Considerations for RE co-op development • Other community power models

  3. About TREC • A not-for-profit co-operative, established in 1998 to build community owned renewable energy projects • Built the first wind co-op in Canada – WindShare – in 2002 - a Joint Venture with Toronto Hydro • Completed the first RE co-op in Ontario under FIT 1.0 - SolarShare (18 sites operational since 2011) • Leader in sustainable energy education – reaching 20,000 children & families every year • Leader in capacity building, development tools and services for community power • Direct project and co-op experience feeds into policy discussions/decisions & capacity building WindShare turbine, Toronto SolarShare installation, Mississagua

  4. Community Power 1) Communities finance projects 2) Local jobs created to build and host projects 4) Electricity consumed in community 3) Profit kept in community

  5. COMMUNITY POWER: Positive Outcomes • Environmental impacts • Community Economic Development • Capacity-building • Energy literacy and behavioural change • Energy Security • Reduced social friction/social license

  6. Ownership of Renewables in Germany, 2010 www.unendlich-viel-energie.de

  7. RE Co-op activity in Ontario • Since GEA/FIT launch in 2009: 25 co-ops formed or emerging • Only 2 have operational facilities (Agris Energy and SolarShare) • Only 4 have receipted offering statements (Agris, OREC, Options, SoarShare) – all solar • Many awaiting FIT contract (need to resubmit FIT 2.0): ZooShare, LakeWind, LIFE, Options, etc. • Many expected to pursue commercial partnership option under new rules (FIT 2.0) • Federation of Community Power Co-operatives formed in 2012 to address barriers, share experiences, advocate for policy change

  8. RE Co-op Models

  9. The Community Bond Model Bond Offering: • $1,000/bond • 5-6% annual return • 5-15 year term • Co-op surplus used for new projects/education

  10. SolarShare Projects WaterView SunFields

  11. SunField Projects • 10kW x 17 sites across Ontario • Annual revenues of approximately $238,000 • All sites generating revenue as of June 2011

  12. WaterView Project • 438kW rooftop installation, over 2.5 acres, Mississauga • Annual revenues of $294,000 • Generating revenue since Nov 2011

  13. Co-op Achievements and Goals To date: Goals mid-2013: • $4 million worth of projects built • 350 member-investors • Raised $500 K in bond investments • $10 million worth of projects built • 750 member-investors • $3 million in bond investments

  14. Scale is important • Single-site, small project scale might not carry a co-op • Need multiple (or large) installations to spread risk and reach economies of scale • Tendency to underestimate the cost of developing & maintaining a project and co-op • Budget needs to account for all costs at the project and co-op level over life of the project (e.g. 20 years)

  15. Project vs. Co-op Costs Project expenses (post construction/operation) Co-op expenses • Land/site lease payments • Maintenance contract • Insurance • LDC account fees • System monitoring • Cost of borrowing money • Interest expense (bond, LTD, bridge interest) • System replacement/repair costs (e.g. inverter, spare panels) • Ammortization • Legal fees • Accounting & audit • Liability and D&O insurance • OS development & renewal • Sales & Marketing • Member communications & AGM • Investor management & security • Bank Fees, postage, etc. • Office Supplies • Travel Exp. • Staff time for many of the above

  16. Protocols are important • Establish member engagement processes and protocols for maintaining your projects and co-op over the long ter • Project monitoring • Member communications • investment security maintained • Financial reporting • Annual audit • Annual general meeting • Board recruitment, etc. TREC is institutionalizing these learnings and making services available to others to achieve economies of scale.

  17. TREC incubated co-ops • Renewable energy education • Energy conservation • Awareness raising • Community outreach Project incubator Capacity-building and training Co-op Development Project Development Sales and Marketing Administrative Services Member Management Serving new co-ops • Mentorship • Development • Training and fostering growth

More Related