Triple Pundit: Seneca Solar Seeks Equitable Solutions for the Climate Crisis
Indigenous innovation is reshaping the burgeoning clean energy industry and empowering Native communities with equitable climate solutions.
Rosana Francescato is a Communications Consultant for Seneca Solar. She was previously Communications Director for the Clean Coalition, a clean-energy nonprofit, Sunible, an online solar marketplace, and MyDomino, an energy savings concierge service. In over 14 years at Adobe Systems, Rosana held senior technical editing and project management positions. She has written extensively on clean energy for publications like CleanTechnica, PV Solar Report, pv magazine, and Energy Central. While on the steering committee of the Local Clean Energy Alliance, Rosana helped evaluate shared renewables legislation in California. She has served on the boards of several clean-energy nonprofits and was the top individual fundraiser for the GRID Alternatives Bay Area Solarthon for 10 years in a row.
Indigenous innovation is reshaping the burgeoning clean energy industry and empowering Native communities with equitable climate solutions.
In Solar Builder Magazine, Seneca Solar Business Operations Manager Hanna Sheridan discusses investigating the feasibility of building a CHERP solar factory on Seneca Nation lands.
Seneca Environmental and other Seneca Nation representatives participated in the 5th Annual Renewable Energy and Sustainability Conference hosted by the Seminole Tribe of Florida.
Seneca Solar is expanding its strategic partnership with Alternative Energy Development Group (AEDG) to develop more than 55 MW in solar energy projects with a total capital expenditure of $135 million.
Former Tesla project manager joins Seneca Solar to integrate the program management expertise of Seneca with AEDG’s growing portfolio.
Seneca Solar, the energy solutions division of Seneca Holdings, LLC, which is wholly owned by the Seneca Nation, is expanding its strategic partnership with Alternative Energy Development Group (AEDG), a developer of commercial and industrial clean energy projects.
Former Tesla project manager joins Seneca Solar to integrate the program management expertise of Seneca with AEDG’s growing portfolio.
Great expectations from startup CHERP, manufacturing their new solar panels in 30 MW/year micro solar module assembly facilities located in underserved communicates, via public-private partnerships.
The U.S. has largely given up on the idea that we can produce solar in our own country, but nonprofit CHERP Solar Works has set out to change this — in a way that promotes equity and justice.
Seneca Environmental Vice President Matt Renner spoke on a panel during Project Drawdown’s Nest Summit Campus event Getting Unstuck: How We Accelerate Climate Action.