DEEE0009950
Cooperative Agreement
Overview
Grant Description
Since 2016, the SolSmart program has helped local governments (LGs) reduce soft cost barriers to solar market development and made it easier for residents to install residential solar energy systems. The next phase of the SolSmart program will expand LG participation, incorporate new technologies and topics, and further accelerate the deployment of solar energy, while advancing key priorities around equitable energy access and environmental justice (EJ).
The new SolSmart program will set a goal of designating at least 500 new communities, for an overall goal of designating almost 1,000 SolSmart communities across the United States between 2016-2027.
The SolSmart program will advance EJ priorities through two key strategies. First, the program will prioritize recruitment activities and technical assistance to underserved or disadvantaged communities, including rural communities, LGs with limited resources, and LGs with substantial low and moderate-income (LMI) populations. Second, the program will prioritize high impact TA support in all communities intended to help facilitate solar adoption among historically disadvantaged populations and by associated institutions (schools, community centers, etc.) and businesses. These strategies will be designed to increase the distribution of benefits in these communities, including cost savings, price stabilization, and environmental impacts. Of the 500 new LGs designated, 200 will be underserved or disadvantaged communities, as defined in the FOA or provided by DOE's Justice40 analysis. Of the 1,000 LG staff receiving direct training through the program, 400 will be staff either from underserved communities or participating in trainings focused on advancing EJ-focused criteria and technical assistance.
Other new elements of the SolSmart program will include the integration of additional SETO programs and tools, such as incentives for adoption of SolarAPP+; a greater focus on using solar plus technologies, such as solar + storage; and an increasing focus on other topics, such as codes and standards; siting and zoning for commercial and utility-scale solar systems; solar financing, Solarize campaigns, and other accelerated deployment strategies. SolSmart will pursue an ambitious communications program to re-engage with previously designated communities, develop new tools and resources in line with new program priorities, and build awareness of the program across the country. SolSmart will set a goal of "leveling up" at least 200 previously designated communities and document at least 6,000 public engagements or use of program outputs, including communications content, downloads of reports or resources, and attendees to public webinars or conference presentations.
Finally, the SolSmart program will develop and implement an impact evaluation strategy designed to measure the impacts of the SolSmart program in reducing soft costs, reducing permitting and inspection (PI) timelines, and accelerating the adoption of solar energy in designated communities across the country. The program will implement a new strategy for baseline data collection and follow-on reporting to better track program impacts in increased solar deployment in SolSmart communities beyond business-as-usual growth expectations. Working with an external evaluator and control group analysis, the program will establish a goal of demonstrating that SolSmart designation leads to a 50% decrease in installation timelines in designated communities, a 25% increase in solar deployment within designated communities, and a total of 500 MW of additional rooftop residential solar energy deployed across the United States.
The new SolSmart program will set a goal of designating at least 500 new communities, for an overall goal of designating almost 1,000 SolSmart communities across the United States between 2016-2027.
The SolSmart program will advance EJ priorities through two key strategies. First, the program will prioritize recruitment activities and technical assistance to underserved or disadvantaged communities, including rural communities, LGs with limited resources, and LGs with substantial low and moderate-income (LMI) populations. Second, the program will prioritize high impact TA support in all communities intended to help facilitate solar adoption among historically disadvantaged populations and by associated institutions (schools, community centers, etc.) and businesses. These strategies will be designed to increase the distribution of benefits in these communities, including cost savings, price stabilization, and environmental impacts. Of the 500 new LGs designated, 200 will be underserved or disadvantaged communities, as defined in the FOA or provided by DOE's Justice40 analysis. Of the 1,000 LG staff receiving direct training through the program, 400 will be staff either from underserved communities or participating in trainings focused on advancing EJ-focused criteria and technical assistance.
Other new elements of the SolSmart program will include the integration of additional SETO programs and tools, such as incentives for adoption of SolarAPP+; a greater focus on using solar plus technologies, such as solar + storage; and an increasing focus on other topics, such as codes and standards; siting and zoning for commercial and utility-scale solar systems; solar financing, Solarize campaigns, and other accelerated deployment strategies. SolSmart will pursue an ambitious communications program to re-engage with previously designated communities, develop new tools and resources in line with new program priorities, and build awareness of the program across the country. SolSmart will set a goal of "leveling up" at least 200 previously designated communities and document at least 6,000 public engagements or use of program outputs, including communications content, downloads of reports or resources, and attendees to public webinars or conference presentations.
Finally, the SolSmart program will develop and implement an impact evaluation strategy designed to measure the impacts of the SolSmart program in reducing soft costs, reducing permitting and inspection (PI) timelines, and accelerating the adoption of solar energy in designated communities across the country. The program will implement a new strategy for baseline data collection and follow-on reporting to better track program impacts in increased solar deployment in SolSmart communities beyond business-as-usual growth expectations. Working with an external evaluator and control group analysis, the program will establish a goal of demonstrating that SolSmart designation leads to a 50% decrease in installation timelines in designated communities, a 25% increase in solar deployment within designated communities, and a total of 500 MW of additional rooftop residential solar energy deployed across the United States.
Funding Goals
THIS FUNDING OPPORTUNITY ANNOUNCEMENT (FOA) IS BEING ISSUED BY THE U.S. DEPARTMENT OF ENERGY’S (DOE) OFFICE OF ENERGY EFFICIENCY AND RENEWABLE ENERGY (EERE) SOLAR ENERGY TECHNOLOGIES OFFICE (SETO) TO SUPPORT LOCAL GOVERNMENT EFFORTS TO REDUCE THE COST OF SOLAR IN THEIR COMMUNITIES, STIMULATE LOCAL SOLAR MARKET DEVELOPMENT, AND REACH LOCAL DECARBONIZATION AND CLEAN ENERGY GOALS. THE OFFICE SUPPORTS SOLAR ENERGY RESEARCH, DEVELOPMENT, DEMONSTRATION, AND TECHNICAL ASSISTANCE IN FIVE AREAS—PHOTOVOLTAICS (PV), CONCENTRATING SOLAR-THERMAL POWER (CSP), SYSTEMS INTEGRATION, MANUFACTURING AND COMPETITIVENESS, AND SOFT COSTS—TO IMPROVE THE AFFORDABILITY, RELIABILITY, AND DOMESTIC BENEFIT OF SOLAR TECHNOLOGIES ON THE ELECTRIC GRID.
Grant Program (CFDA)
Awarding Agency
Place of Performance
Washington,
District Of Columbia
20002-4290
United States
Geographic Scope
Single Zip Code
Related Opportunity
Analysis Notes
Amendment Since initial award the End Date has been extended from 04/30/24 to 01/31/26.
International City/County Management Association (The) was awarded
Expanding Solar Energy Access and Equity: SolSmart Program Grant
Cooperative Agreement DEEE0009950
worth $4,850,000
from the Office of Energy Efficiency and Renewable Energy in August 2022 with work to be completed primarily in Washington District Of Columbia United States.
The grant
has a duration of 3 years 5 months and
was awarded through assistance program 81.117 Energy Efficiency and Renewable Energy Information Dissemination, Outreach, Training and Technical Analysis/Assistance.
The Cooperative Agreement was awarded through grant opportunity SolSmart Program Management.
Status
(Ongoing)
Last Modified 5/12/25
Period of Performance
8/1/22
Start Date
1/31/26
End Date
Funding Split
$4.8M
Federal Obligation
$0.0
Non-Federal Obligation
$4.8M
Total Obligated
Activity Timeline
Subgrant Awards
Disclosed subgrants for DEEE0009950
Transaction History
Modifications to DEEE0009950
Additional Detail
Award ID FAIN
DEEE0009950
SAI Number
None
Award ID URI
SAI EXEMPT
Awardee Classifications
Nonprofit With 501(c)(3) IRS Status (Other Than An Institution Of Higher Education)
Awarding Office
892434 GOLDEN FIELD OFFICE
Funding Office
892403 ENERGY EFFICIENCYRENEWABLE ENERGY
Awardee UEI
H3ETMB4KMWF3
Awardee CAGE
1B1U9
Performance District
DC-98
Budget Funding
Federal Account | Budget Subfunction | Object Class | Total | Percentage |
---|---|---|---|---|
Energy Efficiency and Renewable Energy, Energy Programs, Energy (089-0321) | Energy conservation | Grants, subsidies, and contributions (41.0) | $4,850,000 | 100% |
Modified: 5/12/25