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2025 Solar Moonshot Program Wrapped

Programs

The Solar Moonshot Program helps schools, nonprofits, tribal organizations and community organizations overcome financial and technical barriers to solar adoption, delivering long-term savings and climate benefits where they matter most. 

In 2025, the Solar Moonshot Program took a major step forward, expanding our reach, deepening our impact and providing real savings to nonprofits across the country and internationally. In 2024, the Solar Moonshot Program supported 26 projects and deployed $x. In 2025, the program supported 63 projects, representing a 142% increase year-over-year, and deployed $x. We also surpassed our 200th grantee and over $4,00,000 in solar grants issued since the program's inception in 2020. 

2025 Solar Moonshot Program grantees were located in 16 states, reaching a wide range of communities across the United States, as well as three international projects in Mexico, the Philippines and Africa. Our grantees included school districts, libraries, tribal facilities, food pantries, medical facilities, homes for children and other nonprofit service providers providing vital services for Communities of Concern, organizations that often operate on tight margins but play an outsized role in community well being. Together, these investments unlocked around $600,000 in estimated savings directly to nonprofits, which translate into more predictable operating costs, protection from rising utility rates, and the ability to redirect resources toward mission-critical services like education, healthcare, cultural programming and community resilience. Each project contributes to reducing carbon emissions, supporting local clean energy jobs, progressing  local, state and national climate goals, helping organizations invest in staff and programs and provides an opportunity for the community to learn more about clean energy and lessening climate injustices. These clean energy projects are also reducing climate injustices, supporting regional grid stability and offering crucial back-up power during emergencies.  

The drastic jump in the amount of projects we were able to support signals the demand for clean energy solutions, which will only increase as federal tax credits will begin to diminish in 2026. We remain committed to processing applications as quickly as possible to help our grantees maximize available funding to make their solar dreams possible. 

"Our new solar system will help reduce operating costs for the Clinton Community Hall for decades into the future. We couldn’t have moved forward without the support of the Solar Moonshot Program. In addition to the generous financial support, their program is super accessible and the folks we worked with were so helpful throughout the process. Just such an amazing resource for smaller non-profit facilities like ours that might not otherwise be able to get solar installed.”

  • Clinton Community Hall, Washington 

“Funding through the Solar Moonshot Program provided support for our solar array on our new building. With this boost in funding, we were able to invest more deeply in mission-related aspects of our new space, including managing stormwater on site and planting native species, as well as developing educational exhibits and displays that communicate the importance of our work to protect the Newfound Watershed.”

  • Newfound Lake Region Association, New Hampshire

We are grateful to the program’s generous funders who make this impactful program possible, including our 2025 supporters: BQuest Foundation, San Diego Community Power in partnership with the San Diego Foundation and Calpine Energy, anonymous donors in California and Wisconsin and Palomar. 

To learn more about the program or to apply for a 2026 grant, visit www.solarmoonshot.org

 

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Image of a garbage patch

How to Celebrate the Holidays Sustainably in the time of COVID-19

If you’re scrambling for last-minute holiday gifts (like some of us), it can be tempting to give in to Amazon Prime delivery and the holiday deals at big businesses, throw the likely unethically and unsustainably made items in a gift bag, and call it a day. But with economic losses resulting from the pandemic, and continued impacts of climate injustices,it is even more important to shop ethically and sustainably this year.

If you’re scrambling for last-minute holiday gifts (like some of us), it can be tempting to give in to Amazon Prime delivery and the holiday deals at big businesses, throw the likely unethically and unsustainably made items in a gift bag, and call it a day. But with economic losses resulting from the pandemic, and continued impacts of climate injustices,it is even more important to shop ethically and sustainably this year.


With transportation accounting for 28 percent of total greenhouse gas emissions in the U.S. by economic sector in 2018, and an increase in package deliveries around the holidays, shopping at local, small-owned businesses with sustainably made or second hand gifts is one of the best ways to resist climate change and stimulate the local economy. If you choose to leave your house for holiday shopping, walking or biking to a small owned business is encouraged. In particular, we’re considering how we can best support small businesses owned by Black folks, Indigenous friends and People of Color. If there’s one thing we took from 2020, it’s that our actions are needed to continue showing up for racial and environmental justice.


With the recent rise in COVID-19 cases, shopping in person is not considered the safest option for folks. Many small businesses have gotten creative with local delivery and if you have friends or family who will be shopping in person this year, consider reaching out to them to arrange no-contact drop offs from your favorite local shops. If neither of those options are working out, consider getting gifts delivered to your loved ones from small businesses local to them, so you can save on emissions from shipping presents to them from where you are. In these uncertain times, we’re reminded that the health of our communities and the health of the planet are interdependent. Regardless of whether or not you’re leaving your house to get gifts, there are so many other ways to celebrate sustainably this holiday season--and for good reason. The EPA estimates that the American household waste increases by more than 25 percent between Thanksgiving and New Year’s Day for an estimated additional one million tons of wasted food, shopping bags and gift wrap per week! Along with buying items that are ethically and sustainably made, here are additional tips for a more conscious holiday celebration this year:


1) Say no to plastic and paper bags when buying presents

  • This one may be a little harder while reusable bags are not allowed in some stores, but many stores will allow you to bring them in as long as you bag your items yourself.

2) Rethink gift wrapping

  • If you don’t have gift wrap or bags leftover from previous years, instead of buying new ones, you can opt to use newspaper, reusable bags, reusable gift wrap (for a gift that really keeps on giving!), any leftover shopping bags or just skip the wrapping altogether! If you’re sending packages yourself, consider looking on websites like OfferUp, Buy Nothing or Nextdoor for free shipping boxes.

3) Aim for little to no food waste

  • In San Diego, we typically throw away 40 percent of food, which is higher than the national average. Instead of contributing to that already staggering number, we can be proactive about food waste this year and prevent an increase in methane emissions from adding to over overflowing landfills. We can do this by preparing “just enough” rather than way too much, distributing leftovers to friends, family and houseless folks, freezing leftovers we’re likely to eat and composting the scraps we don’t use while cooking.

4) Get creative for gift giving

  • Do-It-Yourself (DIY) gifts are even more popular this year as we’re spending most of our time at home. Think outside the box for a meaningful, hand-made gift that uses household items. Need inspiration? Pinterest always has great DIY ideas!

5) Gift intentional quality time to your quarantine partners

  • If you’re quarantining with someone you want to spend quality time with, like a friend or significant other, consider planning a thoughtful hangout or date at a COVID-safe place like your home or a park that isn’t crowded. Make it special with energy efficient LED string lights, games, plant-based and locally sourced food (if accessible) and holiday-themed sweaters and music!

6) Gift a donation on behalf of a loved one

  • A great alternative to buying people more things they likely don’t need is donating to a nonprofit organization on behalf of the person receiving the gift. You can even symbolically adopt an animal through the World Wildlife Fund, and the funds go towards programs to help conserve and protect that species.

7) And for last minute gift ideas…


Thanks for caring and reading this post. Individual actions add up and can make an impact reducing carbon emissions contributing to the climate crisis. Happy holidays! 

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Biker riding in the city in front of shops

Biking as a Solution to the Climate Crisis

The San Diego Climate Hub hosted its second quarterly event, Biking a Solution to the Climate Crisis, on Thursday, December 10. The San Diego community engaged in an interactive discussion about how bicycling is one of many solutions to help reduce our CO2 emissions, which exacerbate the climate crisis and contribute to climate injustices. 

The San Diego Climate Hub hosted its second quarterly event, Biking a Solution to the Climate Crisis, on Thursday, December 10.  The San Diego community engaged in an interactive discussion about how bicycling is one of many solutions to help reduce our CO2 emissions, which exacerbate the climate crisis and contribute to climate injustices. 

 

The free event included a presentation with speakers from the nonprofit organizations Bike San Diego, Climate Action Campaign, SanDiego350 and Sierra Club San Diego, and the panel was moderated by Denice Williams with Black Girls Do Bike and the San Diego County Bicycle Coalition.  After the panel there was a Zoom breakout session where fellow activists were able to get to know each other and share about their interest in biking.

San Diego is the eighth largest city in the nation yet ranks sixth for having the worst air pollution. Communities of concern, surrounded by freeways in San Diego, experience higher rates of asthma and pollution related-illnesses, and have a shorter lifespan than communities in other parts of the city.  This is an example of a climate injustice. More people who bike instead of drive dirty, gas vehicles can help reduce local air pollution, which was highlighted during the event. 

 

"Communities of color need to be prioritized for all sustainable transportation improvements that will ensure that they have more access to clean air and affordable transportation options,” said Bertha Rodriguez, the Assistant Organizer at Climate Action Campaign, who presented on Thursday.  “By centering equity and looking at biking through an intersectional lens, we can start breaking down the disparities caused by race, class, gender and ability in order to promote a more inclusive climate revolution."


The San Diego Climate Hub is a center, located in Hillcrest, to strategize, collaborate and build collective power to stop the climate crisis and advance climate justice in the San Diego region. The nonprofit members include Bike San Diego, Climate Action Campaign, SanDiego350, San Diego Coastkeeper and Surfrider Foundation San Diego County, and it’s managed by Hammond Climate Solutions. The purpose of the Climate Hub is to catalyze collaborative local and regional solutions to stop the climate crisis, and quarterly events are a way to bring together activists to share education, resources and people power to create a brighter future.  

The next quarterly Climate Hub event will be in partnership with the San Diego Green New Deal Alliance on February 23 at 5:30 p.m. More details will be available at www.sdclimatehub.org.

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