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2020_06-23_PWETCpacket
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2020_06-23_PWETCpacket
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6/23/2020 8:33:30 AM
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Commission/Committee
Commission/Authority Name
Public Works Commission
Commission/Committee - Document Type
Agenda/Packet
Commission/Committee - Meeting Date
6/23/2020
Commission/Committee - Meeting Type
Regular
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"We have the ability through our size and organization to do something that can have an impact. <br />It makes sense for us to be a leader in this area," said Roseville Mayor Dan Roe. <br />Roe said the city also has invested in an off -site solar garden, switched City Hall over to LED <br />lighting and invested in energy -saving technology at the Guidant John Rose Minnesota Oval, the <br />city's ice rink. <br />Roseville city staffers spent years researching green -energy options before entering into a <br />partnership with iDeal Energies. The Minneapolis -based company, which began in 2010, has <br />installed solar arrays for more than two dozen Minnesota cities, counties and school districts. <br />The Twin Cities is a sweet spot for solar, said Chris Psihos, iDeal Energies' president and CEO. <br />"We are actually in an excellent place to do solar. We have about 200 sunny days a year," Psihos <br />said. "We have cooler weather in the spring and fall. The equipment performs better in those <br />temperatures." <br />As to solar naysayers, Psihos said: "In today's world, solar is incredibly reliable. The trick is to <br />use the right parts and products." <br />Roseville paid nothing up front for the solar arrays; iDeal installed the solar arrays and will <br />operate and maintain them for up to 20 years, with early termination options. <br />In exchange, the city pays the company for the solar energy it uses and what it saves on its utility <br />bill. At the end of the lease, Roseville will take full control of the solar arrays and receive the full <br />economic benefit of the power they produce. <br />The city will save around $2,000 a year on its annual electric bill of about $102,000 for the <br />firehouse and City Hall, Roseville Public Works Director Marc Culver said. <br />Culver anticipates the city will utilize the early termination clause to take full control of the <br />panels in about 13 years. After that, the city could save at least $16,000 per year, he said. <br />About 6% of the electricity at Roseville City Hall, and 13% of that at the fire station, will be <br />powered by solar energy. <br />Later this summer, Roseville and iDeal expect to install 339 additional solar panels on the <br />maintenance facility roof. City officials plan to create an online public dashboard so residents <br />can see how much power the panels are generating. <br />Culver said city officials originally toyed with the idea of installing the panels in a more <br />conspicuous location, to set a good example. But given the additional insurance costs of a <br />ground -based system, and the parklike setting of the City Hall complex, they decided to tuck <br />them up on the roof. <br />
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