Community Ownership of Renewable Energy Projects
Considering the needs of all stakeholders, including community leaders, government officials, industry leaders, Tribal leaders, and researchers, this project aims to investigate the potential of community ownership in renewable energy projects. Community ownership of renewable energy projects at different scales is gaining more attention in the face of growing distributive energy markets and the rapidly changing policy landscape. A shared ownership model in various forms and structures can create a win-win outcome for all stakeholders, regardless of the scale and location surrounding a renewable energy project. The objective is to investigate this potential in all kinds of renewables, including but not limited to solar, wind, battery storage, hydro, and networked geothermal. The most advanced is community ownership of community solar – as we aim to define community-owned solar further and map out the critical elements of community-owned solar projects, including various ownership structures, financing mechanisms, policies, and programs. We also aim to explore shared community ownership as an option when all relevant stakeholders surrounding the siting and permitting of large-scale renewable energy projects negotiate a package of community benefits as part of Community Benefits Agreements or Host Community Agreements.
This project is led by Dr. Jungwoo Chun, Assistant Director at MIT Science Impact Collaborative (SIC) and lecturer at MIT DUSP.