Boston Herald

Mayor unveils plan to subsidize solar panels

- By Chris Sommerfeld­t

NEW YORK — Mayor Adams teamed up with Comptrolle­r Brad Lander on Thursday to announce a pilot program that’d bankroll rooftop solar panel installati­ons for working class homeowners in the city — but funding for the initiative isn’t locked in yet.

The pilot, which is modeled after a proposal the comptrolle­r has advocated for since his time as a Council member, aims to install solar panels at 3,000 homes in the city over the next five years, Adams and Lander said during a press conference in Brooklyn.

The subsidized installati­ons, a component of a multi-tiered sustainabi­lity effort called PlaNYC unveiled by Adams, will be available for one-to-fourfamily homes owned by low-income New Yorkers, officials said.

The city is not setting an eligibilit­y income cap for the program, but will rather focus on installing solar panels in “historical­ly disadvanta­ged neighborho­ods that are experienci­ng disproport­ionate impacts from climate change,” according to Adams spokeswoma­n Kayla Mamelak Altus.

Adams told reporters the solar pilot is the type of initiative the city can get to work on right away, unlike more complex components of PlaNYC, like implementi­ng congestion pricing in Manhattan.

“There are things we can do now, like the solar job,” Adams said. “They are lowhanging fruit before we get to the top of the tree to accomplish what we want to accomplish.”

Still, funding streams for the solar panel pilot are not fully hashed out yet.

Mamelak Altus said the Adams administra­tion expects the pilot to cost between $60 million and $100 million. The administra­tion will apply for that cash from the federal Greenhouse Gas Reduction Fund, which was created by Congress as part of the Inflation Reduction Act last year.

“Applicatio­n will be submitted in coming weeks,” Mamelak Altus said.

The city government will chip in $1 million to fund marketing, planning and some staffing for the pilot, officials said.

Solar panels can help New Yorkers save on energy costs while contributi­ng to lowering the city’s carbon footprint. Expanding the use of renewable energies is part of a string of actions the city has pledged to take to make good on a promise to achieve carbon neutrality by 2050.

Under an initial “Public Solar NYC” plan floated by Lander’s office last year, the city would set up solar panels on rooftops of 25,000 homes over the course of eight years.

Ultimately, the 3,000 homes set to get panels under the new pilot are a drop in the bucket as compared to the city’s more than 700,000 residentia­l buildings.

Asked what he thinks of the administra­tion only committing to 3,000 installati­ons off the bat, Lander said the effort has to start somewhere.

“We are excited about the model, but we can’t scale it up to all 700,000 homes without making sure it works first,” he said.

The pilot rollout comes on the heels of Adams ordering budget cuts at all city agencies, belt-tightening directives that Lander and other progressiv­e Democrats have vehemently opposed.

Adams, who has cited the need for spending cuts to fiscal concerns driven by the local migrant crisis, suggested the pilot is a significan­t achievemen­t at a time of great economic uncertaint­y.

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