How a NSW community solar project raised $120k in 10 days

Just under three months ago, NSW not-for-profit community renewables group Repower Shoalhaven launched an online campaign to raise enough money to install a rooftop solar system at the local bowling club, and kick off the south-coast NSW town’s transition to sustainable energy systems.

The ultimate goal was for 80 per cent of the rooftop solar system to be funded and owned by community shareholders, with the remaining 20 per cent to be owned and funded by the Shoalhaven Heads Bowling Club, which would purchase the electricity. At the end of the 10-year term, the bowling club will be ‘gifted’ the system.

A week before the campaign launch, RenewEconomy reported that the developers of the almost 100kW Repower One project – which also stood to be Australia’s largest solar project financed by ‘everyday investors – hoped to raise $119,800, and were calling for upfront investments of $5,990 per shareholder, for a 3.96kW share of the system.

The response was remarkable. Repower Shoalhaven’s website got 2500 hits within 24 hours, 90 people registered their interest in the project, and when the financial campaign launched a few days later, it raised $120,000 in just 10 days, with around half of the investors coming from outside of the NSW community, from all over Australia.

Not bad for a small group of local people who set out in 2013 with a vision to create a viable community solar model to catalyse renewable uptake in the region.

This Friday, Repower Shoalhaven is holding a launch party at the bowling club to celebrate the huge success of its maiden voyage into community renewables.

“For our first project …we raised $120k in 10 days to install a 99kW system that will save the bowling club $300,000-$400,000 over its lifetime,” said Chris Cooper, president and energy projects manager of Repower Shoalhaven.

“The 99kW system is now happily generating community owned solar power – we submitted our first energy bill last week as a distributed community energy retailer with a PPA,” Cooper added in an email to RenewEconomy.

“We plan to roll out this model on many other local buildings in the coming year. This model doesn’t need to be used just for energy projects – it can be used to fund anything in the local area via a capital investment process.”

Cooper says the not-for-profit group has established partnerships with some of the country’s leading business innovation and legal brains to ensure its community solar model is legally and financially solid.

And its success has attracted political support, too. Attending the launch on Friday will be NSW energy minister Rob Stokes, federal Liberal Party MPs Ann Sudmalis and Gareth Ward, and NSW Liberal MP Shelly Hancock. Shoalhaven Mayor Joanna Gash will also be there.

The considerable Liberal Party presence at the launch could be seen as a win in itself, considering the party’s recent record on renewables, and its undermining of the Renewable Energy Target.

Cooper credits the RET as a key driver of his project’s success, and recently told the local paper that cutting the target would threaten the viability of future solar energy projects in the region.

In particular, saScreen Shot 2014-10-21 at 12.18.07 PMid Cooper, the recommendation of the Warburton Review panel that the eligibility for small-scale generation certificates be reduced from 100kW to 10kW systems, would have a “devastating impact,” he said.

“About 30 per cent of the upfront costs for the 99kW (Repower One) system come through the RET scheme,” Cooper said.

“Solar for small business is currently at a tipping point – if you scale back the RET now you’ll have many local businesses that won’t be able to get solar to reduce their power bills.

“There are also jobs at stake as well obviously in the solar sector locally,” Cooper added. “Repower Shoalhaven will of course be affected, although it won’t kill us, it will make life a lot harder.”

Comments

7 responses to “How a NSW community solar project raised $120k in 10 days”

  1. Marka Avatar
    Marka

    Never under stood how this works. If I’m gifting the system after 10 years that means at the projected rate of return I’m going to out of pocket $1350. Why would any rational investor do that?

    1. David Osmond Avatar
      David Osmond

      Marka, over the 10 years, investors expect to receive about $8340 back, from their $6305 investment. They will not be out of pocket. Each year they will receive a bit over $800 back, being a mixture of earnings and return of capital.

      1. RobS Avatar
        RobS

        The rate of return is not bad, a hell of a lot better than a term deposit or online savings account at current interest rates. I just hope that they were open and honest about the fact that spending the same directly on solar on ones own property would return ~$800-$1000 a year for 25 years or a total return of over $16,000. Essentially this is a great option if you rent or dont have a property suitable to install your own system, but direct investment in solar on ones own roof has a FAR better return than what this scheme offered.

  2. Tim Buckley Avatar
    Tim Buckley

    Great work Repower Shoalhaven!
    Also great to get the Liberal party MPs along to see what damage their party is doing to the future economic viability of Australia. Don’t worry about the solar electricians and other small Australian businesses who will be put out of work improving our economy and environment. Thanks to the short sighted vested interests that rule the Liberal party in Australia today, brown paper bag politics rule – making sure the foreign owned ‘Australian’ coal industry gets what it paid for.

  3. Sue (Russell Island, Qld) Avatar

    Good work Repower Shoalhaven. I’d like to try something like this in my community. But I don’t understand how it works. Does Repower Shoalhaven sell the power directly to the bowling club? How does it meter it etc?

  4. Rob G Avatar
    Rob G

    It highly likely the Warburton report will be pulped and turned into toilet paper and more of these great stories will continue to happen. Beers all round at the bowlo!

  5. Craig Mcclure Avatar

    wait there will be a new gov tax for that

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