Towards Clean Energy Equity: Overcoming Racial Disparities
Speakers
Moderator
Virtual event
Event Summary
In the United States, opportunities for residents to access clean and reliable energy in their homes has improved drastically over the last decade. New technologies have improved household energy efficiency and reduced the carbon footprint of large appliances, including heating and cooling systems. In some states, households can make choices between a growing number of renewable energy suppliers, while others have the ability to produce and use their own solar energy, selling excess to the grid.
Yet, these positive outcomes are not shared equally. For example, Black and Hispanic majority census tracts show significantly less solar rooftop photovoltaics than white counterparts—even after being adjusted for income and homeownership. There are also staggering racial disparities in per-capita energy consumption, household energy expenditures, and rates of electric vehicle deployment. Understanding these disparities, their origins, and how to tackle them, is critical to designing smart and just energy policy. This panel brings together practitioners and researchers to discuss how we can more equitably distribute the benefits that advances in energy policy and technology have brought to some, but not to all.
View the Presentations
Race to Solar: Disparities in Rooftop Photovoltaics Deployment in the United States by Race and Ethnicity
Deborah Sunter
Shadow Caste on Residential Solar in TN
Jason Carney
The Philadelphia Energy Campaign: Building a Robust, Equitable Clean Energy Economy
Emily Schapira

Deborah Sunter

Jason Carney

Emily Schapira
Sara Bronin

This event was a part of Climate Week at Penn.