College district looks for savings through solar

With the expectation of sav­ing $43 million over 20 years, the Grossmont-Cuyamaca Com­munity District is going green with the startup of solar panels on both campuses. The panels, located in the parking lots of each campus includes storage systems to allow the district to buy power at lower prices in the early morning, store power during the day when rates are higher. The district has also in­stalled electric vehicle recharg­ing stations for students and employees at both campuses. The district is expected to save about $600,000 in the first year that the panels are working, and the savings will exponen­tially increase over the 20-year life of the contract, with the largest savings occurring in the later years.

“This is a win-win for the district,” said Lynn Ceresino Neault, chancellor of the Gross­mont-Cuyamaca Community College District in a statement. “We’re helping the environment by us­ing a renewable en­ergy source and we’re also saving taxpayer money.”

The solar panels have been in place for about a year as the district worked to get interconnected with SDG&E and finished up the last items of the project. In addition to the so­lar savings, students and employees have appreciated being able to park their vehicle in the shade provided by the structures.

The district had the solar panels built through a partnership with ForeFront Power, a lead­ing developer of commercial and industrial-scale solar en­ergy and battery storage proj­ects in the US and Mexico. The district pays for the electricity generated by the panels, and the rate for the power through Forefront is set for the next 20 years. This set rate from Fore­Front removes the effects of any rate increases which may be ap­proved by San Diego Gas & Electric Company in the future for 69% of the district’s electric­ity needs.

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