Environment & Energy
Related: About this forumSolar panels for church
I'm the "green guy" at my church and they gave me the OK to look into ways to save money/save the planet. So I connected with a group called "Interfaith Power & Light" who connected me to Energize Delaware (who I was familiar with) and they are going to use a team of engineering students from the University of Delaware and their own auditor to perform a thorough energy audit of the old building to identify areas to focus on. The good part for the Earth is:
There are grants available, of course...thanks President Biden...BUT they have a low-interest loan (2% for 20 years) that they build around savings that we realize. For example, if we get solar panels and they save the church $300/month, they work it so the loan payment is around $300/month. So our out-of-pocket costs would be about the same until the loan was paid off...but we would be cutting fossil fuel use significantly. I hope this all works out! We are a small church of mostly older people--so we can't afford many new bills and not everyone cares about energy. So this will help me sell the idea.
Think. Again.
(17,955 posts)Please be sure the deal you are offered by any private companies is well audited before you sign anything.
Edit to add:
I strongly suggest you speak to other religious organizations that have already installed solar panels for details on the various concerns you may face (fraudsters, tax benefits for 501c-3, etc.).
I am 100% FOR transitioning away from CO2-emitting energy sources but I am also aware there are many scams that focus on the solar panel industry.
Delarage
(2,352 posts)But that was the gist---they'd work the loan payment around whatever our improvements cost. The guy from Energize Delaware said he'd be happy to review any offers we get to make sure they're legit.
Energize Delaware is a non-profit funded by money Delaware gets from other states that send coal-smoke and fossil-filth into our air. They just help get us the grants and stuff and have no preferences---just a list of approved contractors. A couple solar installers I know and love are on the list. CMI Electric's owner is big in the anti-fossil fuel movement in Delaware and is a good guy, so they will definitely be reached out to for a bid.
Think. Again.
(17,955 posts)Delarage
(2,352 posts)I did not see your earlier edit... But that is good advice. There's another Presbyterian church nearby that has a huge array on their roof. I will reach out to them and see how they did it and how it all has worked out for them.