solar innovation over coal

Solar panels are popping up on school rooftops across Virginia, giving teens a front-row seat to renewable energy in action. Virginia’s rapid shift toward solar power marks a dramatic change from its coal-dependent past. The state now ranks fifth nationally for renewable energy growth since 2015.

North Stafford High School just completed its massive solar project in September 2024. The school’s 3,300 panels will save $2.8 million over 25 years while generating 54 million kilowatt-hours of clean electricity. That’s enough to offset 41,583 tons of carbon dioxide.

Dominion Energy’s Solar for Students Program started small in 2015 with just four schools. It’s now expanded to 33 schools plus a museum across Virginia, North Carolina, and South Carolina. Eleven Virginia schools joined the program in its latest expansion. Great Bridge Middle School in Chesapeake became the program’s first beneficiary with a 1.2 kW capacity solar installation.

Students aren’t just watching from the sidelines. They’re learning how solar technology works through hands-on experiences with their schools’ own installations. Technical education centers like Southern Virginia Higher Education Center and New Horizons Regional Education Centers have added solar programs to their curricula. The school programs emphasize the low carbon footprint of solar energy compared to traditional power sources. The Advanced Career Education Center at Highland Springs also installed panels for student learning.

The solar boom reaches students in both cities and rural areas. Schools in Henrico, Dinwiddie, Chesapeake City, Louisa, Hampton, and Loudoun counties all have new solar installations. This widespread adoption mirrors national trends where over 800 schools added solar arrays in 2022-2023. That’s at least one school going solar every day. The state’s solar arrays now power nearly 750,000 households, demonstrating the scale of Virginia’s renewable transformation.

Currently, 11% of K-12 students nationwide attend schools powered partly by solar energy. Virginia’s participating in this growing movement while moving away from fossil fuels. The Virginia Conservation Network pushed for policies supporting local solar energy in 2025, helping accelerate this shift.

These school solar projects do more than cut electricity bills. They’re preparing Virginia’s teens for careers in renewable energy while the coal industry continues its decline. As solar panels multiply on school rooftops, students gain practical knowledge about the technology that’s reshaping Virginia’s energy environment.

The state’s investment in school solar demonstrates how education and clean energy can work together.

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