last chance to join the Northern Indiana Solar Co-op
We are entering the last month to sign up for the solar co-op, a group purchase program coordinated by Solar United Neighbors that is open to residents in and around Continue Reading →
Conversations about ecology in the Heartland
We are entering the last month to sign up for the solar co-op, a group purchase program coordinated by Solar United Neighbors that is open to residents in and around Continue Reading →
A couple weeks ago I went before the Plymouth City Council to give up an update on the Complete Streets Committee’s tactical urbanism project, which aimed to improve pedestrian and Continue Reading →
Things are moving ahead with Solar United Neighbor’s Northern Indiana solar co-op. SUN has enrolled 149 members, who have at least expressed serious interest in going solar at home. 27 Continue Reading →
I’ve been doing some plant sampling around our solar arrays recently (see here for older posts on pairing native, pollinator-friendly plants with solar energy installations). We are trying to figure Continue Reading →
Similar to what we helped coordinate in 2019, northern Indiana is once again seeing a solar co-op being formed for homeowners who are interested in “going solar.” To learn more, Continue Reading →
Ok, a blitz of several things here at once. First, our dear friends at the Appalachian Institute for Renewable Energy (who were instrumental in guiding our solar energy initiatives) are Continue Reading →
Sorry, I am several days late to posting this. If you are confused by this picture that we arranged at Moontree Studios, then read here. And yes, those mittens were Continue Reading →
Last week I had the opportunity to share about solar for the Hoosier Environmental Council’s (HEC) virtual solar workshop. I highlighted several projects in Marshall County, including our own Phase Continue Reading →
Solar energy has seemed out of reach of most Americans for years. Things are rapidly changing, though: Prices have gone down by 65% in ten years. And incentives are in Continue Reading →
Rural counties throughout the Midwest are trying to figure out how to appropriately deploy renewable energy investments across the landscape. Utility-scale wind farms came first. Up until several years ago, Continue Reading →