- According to the U.S. Department of Agriculture, 17.7% of rural families live below the poverty line, compared with 14.5% in the rest of the country.
- Rural communities are often served by electric cooperatives, which often need to spread the costs of maintaining transmission lines among fewer customers – resulting in higher than average electricity rates.
- Promoting investment in energy efficiency through the Clean Power Plan, including more efficient insulation, lighting and appliances, can help rural families lower energy costs without sacrificing comfort.
- Wind farms can bring revitalization to rural areas by providing lease payments to farmers who own the land where the wind turbines are located and creating jobs that will bring more people to the area, resulting in added revenue for hotels, restaurants and rental properties in the area.
Clean Energy Packs Savings for Seniors
- Retirees face budgetary constraints that can affect their ability to pay utility bills, making access to robust energy efficiency measures all the more important.
- Although costly up-front investments have hindered deployment of solar in the past, but community solar power that pools resources of multiple community members allows people to purchase as little or as much renewable energy as they wish.
- Seniors are more vulnerable than others to the negative health effects from air pollution. As more coal plants come offline, seniors will experience decreased exposure to harmful air pollution that contribute to health problems like heart attacks, cancer and respiratory illnesses.
Clean Energy Brings Jobs and Savings to Low-Income, Urban Communities
- Low-income, urban communities are more likely to be located near power plants, dramatically increasing the risk of more direct health impacts from pollution.
- Nearly half of very low-income renters live in multifamily housing. Existing energy efficiency initiatives aimed at multifamily housing have reduce household energy use by 15-30% and, if fully deployed, such improvements could save building owners and residents up to $3.4 billion every year.
- Community solar projects can be placed in repurposed toxic, abandoned or blighted spaces or on large, well-situation rooftops – offering rehabilitation opportunities of existing neighborhoods and buildings.
- Increased development of clean energy resources will create additional opportunities for employment and result in a significant number of local jobs that cannot be exported. The typical wage for an employee in the clean energy industry is $44,000, 13% higher than the typical national wage.
NRDC will release a full report on how the Clean Power Plan can help vulnerable communities in April, so stay tuned!