Energy awareness 2024.10.24 - zimeg/emporia-time GitHub Wiki
🌇 CleanPowerSF: Your local, clean electricity provider
Dear Valued Customer,
October is more than cozy fall sweaters and spooky Halloween movies; it’s also National Energy Awareness Month!
It’s a great time to celebrate the clean, affordable and reliable energy we provide you and more than 380,000 other CleanPowerSF customers every day. It's also a time to learn and take action:
- Learn more about where your energy comes from
- Avoid energy vampiresthis fall and follow these electricity-saving tips to save money on your bill
- Break up with your gas water heater and take advantage of limited-time rebates
Thank you for doing your part this October, and for being a CleanPowerSF customer!
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A photo of Oasis Power Partners, a wind project in Kern County that currently serves CleanPowerSF customers. Gonzaga Ridge will also provide reliable, clean wind energy for CleanPowerSF customers beginning in 2026
CleanPowerSF has finalized an agreement to source energy from the Gonzaga Ridge project, a new wind and battery storage project that will be located in Merced County. Once complete, the Gonzaga Ridge project will add about 150 megawatts of new wind energy capacity to CleanPowerSF’s supply – enough energy to support about 120,000 typical San Francisco homes. This means more reliable and clean power for you and for California’s grid.
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CleanPowerSF recently partnered with Habitat for Humanity to bring electric vehicle (EV) charging stations to their new affordable housing development in Diamond Heights. Habitat for Humanity received $120,000 in incentives through CleanPowerSF's EV Charge SF program.
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Rize Up Bakery, a CleanPowerSF customer and Black-owned business in San Francisco, is more than just about bread. Founded by Azikiwee Anderson or “Z”, Rize Up is a personal journey for the owner and represents the power of resilience in every loaf.
🟦 Learn More About Rize Up Bakery
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Every fall, California utility customers, including CleanPowerSF customers, receive a Climate Credit on their electric and natural gas bills. You can expect to receive $55.17 if you pay for both natural gas and electricity service. Funding for the credit comes from California’s Cap-and-Trade Program to address climate change.