Lawmakers pass bill to bring community solar to Pennsylvania

Despite previous failed attempts, Pennsylvania’s House passed a bill to authorize community solar and natural gas programs to a state with surging energy demands but sluggish energy growth.

Pennsylvania’s House of Representatives passed legislation to allow community solar and natural gas programs across the state.

The “Community Energy Act” would allow for the creation, financing, accessibility and operation of community solar and natural gas projects at no cost to taxpayers.

Community solar enables people and businesses who are renters or can’t put solar on their roof to have access solar-generated electricity through a subscription. The consumer subscribes to a portion of the electricity generated by a local community solar installation, receiving credits on their utility bills for the electricity produced by the facility.

The bill also imposes duties on the Pennsylvania Public Utility Commission, electric distribution companies and subscriber organizations, and provides for prevailing wage and labor requirements.

Rep. Peter Schweyer (R), who introduced the legislation’s House version, said it would protect non-subscribers from having to share the costs of the project’s development because the costs for community energy projects “are borne by those who opt in.”

Before

The program’s energy must be generated by a solar or natural gas facility with a nameplate capacity rating that does not exceed 5 kWac, or 20,000 kW if the facility is a brownfield community energy or a rooftop community solar facility.

The legislation almost included nuclear energy through an amendment by Rep. Roman Kozak (R), but the amendment failed with a tight margin of 101 in favor and 102 voting against the measure.

“Right now, many Pennsylvanians don’t get to choose where their electricity comes from,” said Monica Carey, Pennsylvania program director for Solar United Neighbors. “That means they’re subject to fluctuating energy prices and decisions made by big utility companies. But with community solar, a new option will open up. Ratepayers would have more cost-saving energy choices, allowing them to make the decision that’s right for them.”

The Community Energy Act is part of Pennsylvania Gov. Shapiro’s Lightning Plan, which takes the state’s “all-of-the-above” approach to modernize the state’s energy plan.

The plan is robust. As notable as it is, the Community Energy Act is one of many notable measures within the Lightning Plan’s big pond of initiatives. The plan provides funding for new energy projects through an updated manufacturing tax credit; creates a state energy siting board to streamline energy project approvals, requires 10% of Pennsylvania’s total annual wholesale electricity demand to be met by renewable energy credits that originate in the state, annually increasing by 1% through 2050; creates rebates for energy-efficient appliances; and encourages communities to lower utility bills through shared energy resources, to name a few.

Noting PJM’s expectations for electricity usage to triple from its initial projections, Dennis Affinati, the vice president of the International Brotherhood of Electrical Workers 3rd District, said the legislation “will help expand solar markets to members of the community regardless of geographic or financial limitations. By creating this opportunity,” he said, “we will help satisfy the demands of consumers while training the workforce for the future energy economy.”

However, community solar is well-positioned to respond to the challenges and opportunities of solar development on active, abandoned, or reclaimed mine sites,” said Bobby Huges, executive director of the Eastern PA Coalition for Abandoned Mine Reclamation.

“These sites are often within close proximity to existing grid infrastructure and underserved coalfield communities, yet are generally smaller and fragmented, meaning they are not ideal for 100 acres-plus grid-scale projects,” he said.

Additionally, a Penn State Center for Economic and Community Development study estimated that community solar projects in Pennsylvania would support more than 11,00 jobs during their construction and generate about $1.8 billion in economic activity across the state. For comparison, there were 4,287 solar jobs in Pennsylvania as of March 2025, according to SEIA.

Pennsylvania’s previous attempts to pass community solar legislation failed. The bill from this year’s legislative session closely mirrors the House bill in 2024, which also passed the House but failed to make it through the Senate.

Despite bipartisan support, Pennsylvania has yet to establish a community solar program, Elowyn Corby, Vote Solar Action Fund’s Mid-Atlantic regional director said, and noted  community solar programs implemented across its neighboring states, New York, Maryland and New Jersey.

Our Solar PA, a coalition of groups from across the state formed during Pennsylvania’s previous legislative attempt at community energy. While the bills ultimately died, their belief and advocacy in community solar continues to push forward remaining “united behind a belief that community solar has the power to meaningfully expand access to clean energy in the Commonwealth.”

The bill passed the House 114-89, with 101 democrats and 13 republicans voting in favor, and one democrat and 88 republicans voting against the bill. The legislation next moves to the state Senate.