sonnen Inc | October 19, 2016

sonnen Provides Resiliency for New Affordable Zero Energy Housing Development in Rural Vermont

October 19, 2016 (Los Angeles, CA) – Sonnen celebrates a milestone today at the ribbon cutting ceremony for the McKnight Lane Affordable Housing Development in Waltham, Vermont, the first net-zero, low-income rental housing development in the country. The project is led by the Addison County Community Trust and Cathedral Square, and it represents the efforts of a unique coalition of stakeholders from community development and agencies, industry, Vermont government, philanthropy, and the nonprofit sector to transform a blighted mobile home community into an energy resilient community using solar + the sonnenBatterie smart energy storage technology.

This innovative project showcases fourteen customized net-zero modular homes, constructed by VERMOD, a Vermont company, and demonstrates how the combination of energy efficiency, solar PV, and energy storage brings greater energy independence and economic benefits to customers.  The sonnenBatterie home battery system installed in each of these homes is paired with small-scale solar rooftop panels and stores excess locally generated solar energy.  Therefore, by using sonnen’s cutting edge battery technology, customers achieve greater energy resilience and the local utility, Green Mountain Power, reduces peak demand on the grid, providing cost savings to all customers. During grid outages caused by storms or emergencies, the battery is able to keep the solar system running to power essential parts of the home like lights, a refrigerator, and furnace during the day in addition to storing excess solar for use at night. Green Mountain Power will partner with customers to utilize the batteries during peak energy times to directly lower costs for customers by reducing transmission and capacity costs.

“At sonnen, our goal is clean, affordable and reliable energy for all. Projects like the McKnight Lane development, enable us to bring new technologies like solar+storage to lower income communities, providing cost savings and peace of mind for these homeowners, bolstering the local utility grid and contributing to greater clean energy equity,” said Christoph Ostermann, global CEO of sonnen.

“Solar paired with battery storage is a relatively new technology, so highlighting the many benefits of such projects is very important,” said Clean Energy Group Project Director Todd Olinsky-Paul. “The McKnight Lane Housing Development is unique because it enables low-income rural communities to access these technologies today, not years from now.”

The addition of the solar battery storage systems to the McKnight Lane homes came about thanks to a collaboration between sonnen, Green Mountain Power, the Addison County Community Trust, Cathedral Square, Clean Energy Group, Clean Energy States Alliance (CESA), Efficiency Vermont. sonnen in partnership with the High Meadows Fund and The Vermont Community Foundation Sustainable Future Fund funded the inclusion of the sonnenBatterie smart solar energy storage systems. CESA will work with sonnen and Green Mountain Power to collect and analyze data from the battery systems and develop system optimization analysis; and Clean Energy Group, with foundation support for its Resilient Power Project, will share lessons learned to improve this and future, similar projects.

Read more about this project in a fact sheet at http://www.cleanegroup.org/ceg-resources/resource/project-overview-mcknight-lane-redevelopment-project/

About Clean Energy Group

Clean Energy Group is a leading national, nonprofit advocacy organization working on innovative technology, finance, and policy programs in the areas of clean energy and climate change. Clean Energy Group also manages the Clean Energy States Alliance, a coalition of state and municipal clean energy funds. Clean Energy Group’s Resilient Power Project is designed to help states and municipalities with program and policy information, analysis, financial tools, technical assistance, and best practices to speed the deployment of clean, resilient power systems in their communities. For more information, visit www.cleanegroup.org and www.resilient-power.org.

About the Clean Energy States Alliance

The Clean Energy States Alliance (CESA) is a national, nonprofit coalition of public agencies and organizations working together to advance clean energy. CESA members—mostly state agencies—include many of the most innovative, successful, and influential public funders of clean energy initiatives in the country. CESA’s Energy Storage Technology Advancement Partnership (ESTAP), supported by U.S. DOE Office of Electricity and Sandia National Laboratories, is a federal-state funding and information sharing project that aims to accelerate the deployment of electrical energy storage technologies in the U.S. Learn more at www.cesa.org.

About sonnen

At sonnen, we believe clean, affordable, and reliable energy for all is one of the greatest challenges of our time. With 15,000 sonnenBatterie systems installed worldwide, sonnen Group is a proven global leader in intelligent energy management solutions that provide greater energy control for residential and commercial customers through increased solar self-consumption, reduced peak energy usage and reliable backup power during outages – contributing to a cleaner and more reliable energy future. sonnen has won several awards for its energy innovations and sonnenBatterie products, including MIT’s Technology Review’s 50 Smartest Companies 2016, Cleantech Global 100 for 2015 and 2016, Greentech Media’s 2016 Grid Edge Award for innovation, and Cleantech’s 2015 Company of the Year Award in both Israel and Europe. Learn more at https://sonnenusa.com/en/ or follow us on Twitter.

Press Contact

Michelle Mapel, Director of Marketing, sonnen, Inc.
m.mapel@sonnen-batterie.com
(626) 825-5580