News & Articles on Community Power

Developing renewable energy on the scale needed to make the energy transition will require public acceptance. Unlike nuclear power, where society can force a single plant on a community for the benefit of society at large, renewable energy will have to become ubiquitous in our communities and on our landscapes. This can only be possible when the majority accept this transformation. Experience has taught that acceptance is greatest when neighbors and the community at large can participate in the renewable energy revolution. The beauty of renewable energy is that everyone can take part–and own a stake in their future–when given an opportunity to do so. The challenge is creating the policies that make this possible, whether it’s for a community wind project or a solar garden.

New Association of Wind Cooperatives Forms in Québec

By

Paul Gipe

A consortium of cooperatives developing wind projects in Québecé has formed a new association that expects to participate in the …

Gregpahlcommunityenergy jpg

The Citizen Powered Energy Handbook: Community Solutions to a Global Crisis

By

Paul Gipe

Greg Pahl’s idea of shifting the debate from Not In My Back Yard to Please, In My Back Yard with …

Vingesus–Whisper of Wings

By

Paul Gipe and Nancy Nies

Ok, we liked this book because it has lots of pictures: pictures of wind turbines, pictures of people, pictures of …

EPR ou ENR: Abécédaire pour y voir clair

By

Related Files enr_epr_abecedaire-pdf

LA NOUVELLE POLITIQUE ÉNERGÉTIQUE VS LES PROJETS ÉOLIENS EN QUEBEC

By

Gaëtan Ruest

Amqui, Quebec, Canada, vendredi le 5 mai 2006 OPINION Source : Gaëtan Ruest ing. Maire d’Amqui Cell : 418 629 …

Accroître Les Possibilités en Matière D’Energie Renouvelable en Ontario

By

Ontario Ministère De L’energie

COMMUNIQUÉS Version Original Ontario Ministère de l’Energie Pour diffusion immédiate Relations avec les médias 416 314-8975 Le 21 mars 2006 …

Solar office. solar powered office building in schonau, southern germany.

Strom Rebels of Schönau: The Village That Built Their Own Solar Utility

By

Paul Gipe

Alt captured that rebellious spirit in his inspiring tale of the small town of Schönau and how residents built a solar utility in the deep recesses of Germany’s Schwartzwald–the Black Forest of legend. The story has all the elements of its own legend in the making. Small town Davids against electric utility Goliaths. Simple townsfolk with a bright, you could say “sunny”, outlook on the future. And a decades-long struggle to bring their dream to reality. There’s a movie script waiting to be written, or at least a documentary

Toronto’s windshare cooperative. windshare’s more than 400 members own one half of the wind turbine. toronto hydro, the municipal utility owns the other half. the lagerwey 52 meter (170 foot) diameter wind turbine stands at a prominent location overlooking the gardiner expressway in canada’s largest city. the first urban wind turbine in north america, it has became a beacon for renewable energy advocates across the continent. 2009.

Toronto’s WindShare Coop

By

Paul Gipe

North America’s first truly urban wind turbine is located on the grounds of the Canadian National Exposition, the CNE or …

WindShare Performance Table

By

Paul Gipe

Wolfgang Paulsen, Bohmstedt, and Butendiek

By

Paul Gipe

  Wolfgang Paulsen is one of the owners of a Bürger wind project in the far northwest of Schleswig-Holstein near …