Philadelphia Solar Schools Initiative (PSSI) wants to use
solar energy and solar energy education to brighten the future of 20
Philadelphia public schools and nearly 1,000 students. Next year PSSI, which is
already teaching a solar technology course at YouthBuild Philadelphia Charter
School, wants to install 5,000 solar panels on the rooftops of 20 public
schools and to provide solar energy education programs at each of those
schools.
The initiative is being led by Solar States, a South
Kensington-based solar energy provider that Micah Gold-Markel founded in 2008
with the goal of connecting sustainable energy, education, and economic
development.
Shortly after launching, the company worked with Science
Leadership Academy to develop a solar energy elective.
“We saw the power,” Gold-Markel said. “We saw how students,
once they learned about solar energy, they really grasped it.”
For the past few years, Solar States has been focusing on
its product - perfecting its solar panels and navigating purchase agreements.
Now through PSSI, Solar States is back in the classroom, teaching a daily
course to YouthBuild students. The course teaches everything from business
skills like marketing and budgeting to the vocational aspects of solar energy,
like the difference between attaching panels with ballast weights versus
screws. This year PSSI is working with 30 YouthBuild students - 15 students in
one five-week session and another 15 students in a second five-week session.
Next year, PSSI hopes to take their model to the next level.
In addition to the YouthBuild course, PSSI plans to work with students to
install 5,000 solar panels at 20 Philadelphia schools. Solar States will sell
each school the energy its panels produce at a rate guaranteed lower than the
schools are currently paying for electricity. Through Clean Currents, the other
PSSI partner, the schools will be able to purchase their remaining energy needs
in the form of windpower.
Since PSSI will pay for the solar panel installations - a
$1.5 million infrastructure investment - and then sell the schools electricity
at a rate lower than they currently pay, the schools stand to save through
PSSI.
Education is also a critical component of the solar project,
and PSSI hopes to work with close to 1,000 students next year alone.
“That’s part of our philosophy - that every solar
installation is a teachable moment,” Gold-Markel said.
At the moment, PSSI is running an indiegogo crowdsourcing
campaign to raise $40,000 to fund a full-time school relations
director/teacher. Gold-Markel said PSSI needs this $40,000 to get off the
ground but that eventually PSSI would fund the position through the solar
energy sales. To-date the campaign has raised $1,650.
Five schools have agreed to participate next year, but until
the terms are finalized PSSI is not releasing the names of those schools. PSSI
is in talks with another 15 schools, but Gold-Markel encourages any school
interested in participating to reach out. While the Gold-Markel hopes to work
with high schools, he said the program could be tailored to middle and
elementary schools as well.
Source: PlanPhilly.com
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