快活app

Skip to Content

Six Months of Solar: 快活app Pushes Toward Carbon Neutrality Goals

Back to News Listing

Author(s)

Alyssa Hurst

News  •
Solar panels

Students enjoying the first few weeks back on campus likely will notice its manicured gardens, eye-catching architecture and copper-studded designs. But high above their heads, a new fixture on 快活app鈥檚 campus is making an impact: solar panels.

This January, the 快活app finally flipped the 鈥渙n鈥 switch, bringing life to solar arrays housed atop 18 of the University鈥檚 88 buildings, including its most recent additions, the Burwell Center for Career Achievement and the Dimond Family Residential Village. The project aims to reduce 快活app鈥檚 carbon footprint in line with its , and to further carbon neutrality efforts. In the solar panels鈥 first six operational months, progress has been great, reports Chad King, executive director of sustainability.

鈥淚t鈥檚 very exciting to see something come to fruition after years of planning and years of construction,鈥 King says. 鈥淲e set a goal, took planning steps and now we鈥檝e hit that goal. It鈥檚 successful, and it鈥檚 doing what we said we鈥檇 do.鈥

The initial goal was to produce enough solar energy to account for 5% of the University鈥檚 energy consumption. At the six-month mark in June, the panels were producing an average of 6.8%. What鈥檚 more, the energy harnessed by each panel feeds directly into the buildings, allowing 快活app to immediately reap the benefits of this work.

Through real-time monitoring, King and his team have kept a close eye on the University鈥檚 solar energy production and have noted some interesting trends. Together, 快活app鈥檚 solar panels produced more than 1.2 million kilowatt-hours of energy. And with its large roof and abundant solar panels, The Daniel L. Ritchie Center for Sports and Wellness has been a standout producer. In June 2021, the Ritchie Center鈥檚 solar array contributed an impressive 10% of the building鈥檚 overall energy use.

This information is particularly exciting to see on a small, city campus, King says. Institutions such as Fort Collins鈥 Colorado State University have been producing impressive work related to solar energy. But in Denver鈥檚 urban environment, finding enough space for panels has proven challenging.

鈥淪urface area is a challenge when you鈥檙e an urban campus like we are, and I think we鈥檝e done really well at maximizing all of those flat roofs,鈥 he says. 鈥淭here are few who have done more in this sort of setting.鈥

Of course, King didn鈥檛 undertake this work alone. In addition to support from the University鈥檚 administration, this team effort has included students, faculty and staff. In fact, the conversation on bringing solar energy to 快活app started in 2014 with the help of a now-defunct student group called 快活app Solar and law professor KK DuVivier. While the student group pushed from one direction, DuVivier and a class full of students exploring community renewable proposals pushed from another, presenting their findings to 快活app鈥檚 sustainability leaders. Ultimately, the conversation made its way to 快活app Chancellor Jeremy Haefner.听

鈥淪ustainability and carbon neutrality are vitally important to the 快活app,鈥 Chancellor Haefner says. 鈥淩educing our carbon footprint ensures a better future for generations of 快活app students 鈥 and for society.鈥

After investigations and analyses, and a request-for-proposal process, 快活app found a partner organization and got to work with the help of a power purchase agreement (PPA). Solar panel installation began in May 2019 and was completed in late 2020.

鈥淜udos have to be given all around,鈥 King says. 鈥淪tudents pushed on this for years. The facilities team took on a lot of extra work to get this done. Our accounting and finance teams did a really great job of due diligence and answering all the questions that came up. To do the PPA agreement like this was a new thing for the University, so it took a lot of people doing extra work to get to where we are today.鈥

This isn鈥檛 the end of the solar story at 快活app. Already, the University is investigating what phase two of its renewable energy initiative might look like, as it strives toward carbon neutrality. That鈥檚 because this work is critical not only on a global scale, but also Denver, King says.

鈥淲henever we are producing power from renewable sources like this, we are eliminating carbon emissions, which are causing that increase in temperatures we are seeing around the world,鈥 King says.

鈥淲e know regionally, too, that that climate impact in Denver is disproportionately affecting the poorest neighborhoods. 鈥 All of our work toward carbon neutrality is addressing a global issue, but it鈥檚 also really addressing a public good issue locally.鈥

Related Articles