Start-Ups Rise to Push Solar on College Campuses

Universities are on the cutting edge of solar energy research, but they’re surprisingly laggard when it comes to adopting it.

Only nine campuses have installed systems producing more than 1 megawatt of electricity, and even those system are making only a tiny dent in their campus power supplies. The 1.2 MW system at the University of California San Diego, for one, generates less than 4% of campus energy use. Dozens of other campuses have smaller solar projects, but among them, only 27 top 100 kilowatts.

Compare our nation’s universities with Wal-Mart, and the numbers are pitiful. Wal-Mart has 18 large arrays in California alone, and it just announced it will double that number in the next 18 months.

So why are universities so slow to jump on solar?

Certainly they could benefit from the carbon-reduction points they’ll earn under the University and College President’s Climate Commitment, a pledge that 633 institutions are now bound to. Solar is also an outstanding educational vehicle for students, especially those eyeing 21st century green jobs. And we mustn’t forget, PV makes great fodder for glossy recruitment pamphlets.

The answer is perhaps best explained by the handful of NGOs and for-profit consulting firms that have popped up to advance the market for solar in higher ed.

They pare the issue down to this: University decision-making moves at a glacial pace, and speedy private-sector solar firms have plenty of other business they can move on with for-profit velocity. It simply hasn’t been worth the time of solar firms to work with campuses – until now.

That untapped market and the lost opportunity for universities are precisely what compelled Jacob Travis, founder of the newly launched Solar College Initiative, to get involved in the solar biz after years in academia.

“There’s a fundamental issue – after a certain point, it just doesn’t remain profitable for solar firms to work with universities because the decision-making and contracting period tends to take forever. By streamlining the evaluation and contracting phases, we hope to create a ‘solar pipeline’, where numerous firms will be jumping at the chance to offer ripe universities the best solar deal they can get. It’s a total win-win.”

This article has been cross-posted from SolveClimate.com.  To read the rest of the article, click here.


1 Response to “Start-Ups Rise to Push Solar on College Campuses”


  1. 1 links for 2009-05-12 - Kevin Bondelli’s Youth Vote Blog Trackback on May 12th, 2009 at 2:30 pm
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About Rachel


Rachel is Executive Director of CleantechU, where she works with campus leaders at the student, faculty and administrator level to create multi-disciplinary communities of cleantech entrepreneurship at leading U.S. universities. Prior to CleantechU, Rachel ran the Business Council on Climate Change (BC3), a membership organization of over 100 major Bay Area companies committed to sharing best practices on climate solutions. In 2008, Rachel founded Campus InPower, a non-profit consultancy that delivers innovative funding mechanisms to college campuses seeking to create multi-million dollar sustainability funds. Rachel graduated from UC Berkeley in 2008 with a degree in Conservation and Resource Studies and Forestry, and is winner of the David Brower Youth Award, Morris K. Udall Fellowship, and Big Ideas at Berkeley Innovation Grant.

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