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Community energy in schools. Ben Crystall For Village Halls Conference. Mill Mead: small primary school with strong links to community, former pupils and their families. 2013. 4 parents, 2 governors …. …and 1 flat roof.
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Community energy in schools Ben Crystall For Village Halls Conference
Mill Mead: small primary school with strong links to community, former pupils and their families
2013 4 parents, 2 governors… …and 1 flat roof
Community energy: people and communities working together to save, generate, purchase, and manage energy, with local people benefiting from the power produced or saved. Chief Enabler: the “Feed In Tariff” A subsidy paid by government for every unit or “kilowatt hour” of clean electricity. This enables photovoltaic arrays or wind turbines to generate an income for a community group. Rate is guaranteed for 20 years from the day of installation.
Benefits of community energy Community-owned renewables schemes “deliver a range of social and economic benefits to local communities… confidence, employment and training… increased autonomy, empowerment, and resilience... opportunities for education and a strengthened sense of place” National Trust, and Community Energy Scotland
Specific Benefits for Mill Mead Help finances at Mill Mead School Tackle climate change Community ownership Invest in our children’s future
Our Plan: Set up a not-for-profit “BenCom” Raise capital with a community share offer Purchase panels, administer the FiT and maintain the PV system Must cost the school NOTHING Volunteers on an unpaid basis
November 2013 • Share offer opened 1st November 2013 • Aim: 25KW panels • Cost: £45,000 Capital raised in 3 weeks, with 38 members Investor profile: 1/3 school 2/3 wider community
Over 20 years, community energy will: • Save Mill Mead at least £40,000, and eliminate 220 tonnes of carbon emissions • Create a fund for local projects • All at zero cost to school, EHDC and HCC • Act as a catalyst for further action
HEN Phase 2: completed October 2016 • Installed a further 33 kilowatts of panels at Hunsdon JMI School near Ware and Morgans Primary School in Hertford. (50+ investors £48000) • Used same financial model (plus a small charge for electricity used by schools)
Can community-funded PV still deliver? Possibly, assuming: • Electricity prices continue to rise rapidly • Building usage is relatively large • Community is willing to fund the panels • The fact that PV panels will last 30 years+ BUT new community funding models are starting to emerge… Panels could keep going for 35 years or more…
Replacing lights with LEDS: • FiT replaced by cost savings produced by switching from conventional lights to LEDs • Uses a contract between community group and Community Centre and or school. (The community group is responsible for the installation, maintenance and repair of LEDs and both partners share in costs savings.)Saves money, saves carbon, saves energy.More at: http://www.pureleapfrog.org/blog.jsp?id=53
Questions: www.hertfordenergynow.org.uk Email: info@hertfordenergynow.org.uk