Walnut Way’s Award-Winning Solar Project
Neighborhood energy saving project could be model for others.
Walnut Way Conservation Corp. will be saving hundreds of dollars on its energy bill, thanks to an award-winning presentation on community sustainability.
Sponsored by the Midwest Renewable Energy Association, the Seeing RED in Communities Contest is a national contest open to nonprofit organizations with innovative community development projects that promote sustainability. Each organization submitted a 10-minute presentation on solving sustainability challenges. In a live, popular vote at the 24th Annual Energy Fair in Custer, Wis., Walnut Way beat three other nonprofit finalists, including the Urban Ecology Center in the Menomonee Valley, to win a two-kilowatt photovoltaic system.
Jeremy Davis, environmental specialist at Walnut Way, worked others at Walnut Way, to create the winning presentation. “I think the uniqueness to our proposal was the solar history we have already and what we’re trying to do at Walnut Way,” Davis said. “In 2011, we were able to install three solar thermal systems on houses in the neighborhood. Those systems use the sun’s energy to heat water, saving on your natural gas bill.” Walnut Way worked with Milwaukee Shines and Focus on Energy on those installations.
The grand-prize installation will be installed on Walnut Way, 2240 N. 17th St., in August. Valued at $10,000, the system is expected to provide about half of the annual power needs of an energy-efficient home and serve as a model for energy-bill savings in an urban community, according to the MREA.
“It won’t eliminate the entire bill, but it will definitely offset some of our energy costs,” Davis said.
“Energy security plays a fundamental role in the development of economically sustainable households and communities,” he said. “Wisconsin has one of the highest rates of single-parent households most likely to receive (energy) assistance. The chronic problem of high energy bills leads to risky budget trade-offs, food insecurity, unhealthy housing conditions, eviction and homelessness.”
Davis said Walnut Way system will show the community that solar energy can help relieve those problems. “It fits directly into our mission of environmental stewardship,” he said. “It’s producing clean energy and serving as a great demonstration project. Having neighbors and tour groups coming to look at it will give us a chance to teach them about it and show that it can be done.”
This story was originally published by Milwaukee Neighborhood News Service, where you can find other stories reporting on fifteen city neighborhoods in Milwaukee.