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Glasgow’s community-owned renewable energy co-operative

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News

Our Community Share Offer is live!

18 May 2021 By Ellie Harrison

After nearly six years in the making, we’re so excited to be finally launching our Community Share Offer, with this beautiful film by James Alcock made on site at Glendale Primary School last October.

Don’t miss your chance to join Glasgow Community Energy – Glasgow’s new community-owned renewable energy co-operative. Sign up before our Community Share Offer closes on 18 June 2021.

Apply to join

Filed Under: News

What’s all the fuss about climate change?

8 April 2020 By Calum Watkins

No doubt aside from Coronavirus, the climate crisis is very much in the headlines thanks to significant efforts to increase climate literacy in schools, communities, workplaces and Government. But this is more than headlines, the tangible impacts of climate change are being felt around the world as the adverse effects of our human activities continue unabated. Negatives aside, Glasgow Community Energy are committed to empowering people from all walks of life to be engaged, informed and share what they learn with others in the hope that the collective action of many people can transform our communities and restore our planet.

So, what’s our role in this grand vision, and what can you do?

Our programme of outreach is very diverse, but we start with engaging with schools, where we have provided more than 15 solar energy workshops to date. Our hope is to encourage the next generation of climate conscious thinkers by exploring the nature of energy access in developing countries and how energy can be used to improve our lives. It’s wonderful to see young people questioning their understanding of the world through the hands-on sessions and passionately pursuing STEM subjects. We’re always looking for invites to more schools so do get in touch!

We have also participated in Climate Conversations (a government initiative to help communities grapple with the challenges of creating a more sustainable world) and hope to facilitate more this year.

Some of you will be aware of the upcoming COP26 (UN Climate Change Conference) in November this year which will be held in Glasgow. Glasgow Community Energy will be involved in the Year of Climate Action in the lead up to COP26, as we hope to educate and inspire others whilst encouraging local policy makers to champion environmental action. This year is highly significant as it marks a point at which societal pressure, political will and economic development need to align if we are to achieve the goals set out by the 2015 Paris Climate Agreement and meet new Net Zero Emissions targets. We’d encourage anyone to find out more about the COP26 and get involved!

Our climate crisis is an emergency, but it is not a quick fix. If we want to guarantee the welfare of generations to come, we need a sustained commitment, where everyone has a part to play.

Guest blog by Calum Watkins
Director, Glasgow Community Energy

Filed Under: News

Financing Community Projects

25 February 2020 By Zoe Dickson

A closer look at how to finance community projects

Financing community projects can seem daunting at first. Projects with several stages and different amounts of funding will require a significant amount of advance planning to make sure the project is feasible, but thankfully there are various different options to help aid this process and financially support local projects.

There are several government level grants and loans specifically designed to help fund community based projects. Keeping a look out for local financing opportunities is a good idea, as many councils have set aside pots of money for this purpose. Any applications should be carefully reviewed, as there are an excess of projects requiring funding at any given point.

There are many sources of finance to help support community energy specifically. Glasgow Community Energy is a community solar energy project and GCE has received funding through various different methods. This has included a Scottish Power Energy Networks (SPEN) grant through the Green Economy Fund, a fund supported by Scottish Power to specifically work with smaller communities and provide access to funding for projects that may have struggled to finance otherwise.

GCE were also successful in applying for a CARES loan. CARES is the Scottish Government’s Community and Renewable Energy scheme that was created to provide financial support to local energy projects. The CARES scheme includes an Enablement Grant of up to £25k, designed to get renewable energy projects off the ground, funding start-up costs such as feasibility analysis and community consultation. The CARES Development Loan is then available to take forward these plans created in the initial stages, including a write off facility to mitigate development risks. Finally, the CARES Innovation Grant is available to help progress particularly innovative community energy projects. This is managed by Local Energy Scotland, who also provide advice, toolkits, case studies and other online resources for communities.

In addition, GCE is working in conjunction with Energy4All, a non-profit organisation that helps to fund local energy projects. Energy4All have helped to develop 27 community energy projects, with more in the pipeline. They create co-operatives by working with communities to develop renewable energy projects. Energy4All provide help and support all the way through the project by helping applying for funding, finance modelling, hiring a project manager and issuing a share offer to raise the capital required for the project to be successful. Local people invest by buying shares and receive annual interest payments in return. This effectively means that the members, those who have invested, therefore own the project. In theory, once the capital is paid off the project will at this point be making money. Along with some regular maintenance costs, the fees will be paid and the interest paid off to the members, the remaining profit is issued to deserving local projects. This is known as a community benefit fund. A good example of an Energy4All project is the Edinburgh Community Solar Co-operative. People from across the UK invested over 1.4 million to install PV solar panels on 24 different buildings across Edinburgh. Every year this generates 1.1 GWh of clean renewable electricity, saving over 1000 tons of carbon dioxide. Through Edinburgh’s community benefit funds, the co-operative have already supported five different local projects.

Guest blog by Zoe Dickson
Director, Glasgow Community Energy

Filed Under: News

Three reasons businesses should partner with community organisations in 2020

3 February 2020 By Glasgow Community Energy

With 2020 well under way and everything from Brexit to COP26 on the agenda, we thought our next Glasgow Community Energy blog post should come from one of our newest partners, DMG Environmental Consultancy. A Glasgow-based business committed to helping businesses meet their sustainability goals who we’ll be working with later in the year when our Community Share Offer launches. Take a read as Founder, Daniel shares his top three tips on how businesses can work with community groups.

Supporting community organisations may feel like a drain on your company finances or time, or both. However, there are significant benefits to forming strong, social and holistic partnerships with your businesses’ local community.

1. Become part of the community

Community organisations can make a real difference in the area your business operates. By supporting them you not only build your local business network but also build community loyalty to your business. In the minds of many local people supporting community projects means supporting the community, making them more likely to support you when you need it most.

Having your business recognised as part of the community gives you a lasting legacy in your area and can make you more successful. Gaining recognition and support from the local community can take years for businesses to build up. Partnering with community organisations fast-tracks this process and increases the longevity of your business.

Some of the Glasgow Community Energy team at Seven Lochs as part of a community litter clear up. Two truck loads of litter were removed.

2. Offset emissions and benefit society

Partnering with a community organisation that focuses on renewable energy, rewilding, tree planting or any other climate positive activity generally has a double benefit. Every business can make significant changes that reduce their climate impact. However, many businesses will still produce some emissions from their activities, even after adaptation. This is where offsetting comes in.

Offsetting is a process where a company can invest in a project that reduces emissions (e.g. a community renewables or reforestation organisation), contributing to the fight against climate change. That company can then use this reduction in emissions to counteract (or offset) their own remaining emissions, bringing them closer to net-zero carbon emissions or even making them carbon positive (preventing more carbon from entering the atmosphere than they emit).

This gives the company the double benefit of improving their Corporate Social Identity, showing their commitment to ethical and trust standards, as well as protecting the environment and allowing the company to tap into the growing number of climate-conscious customers.

The community often has a double benefit from this partnership as well. In the case of community renewable energy projects an aspect of urban or community regeneration can be included and the profits from the renewable electricity produced will support further community projects.

3. Stand out from the crowd

Partnering with community organisations can differentiate your business from your competitors. 89% of consumers think businesses should support charities and their local communities and 82% said they would choose a company engaged with its community when deciding on equivalent products or services over one that is not.

Supporting your local community can also improve employee engagement – and engaged staff means a more efficient, profitable business. Many individuals want to volunteer or raise money for charity, but don’t have the time in their busy schedules. Offering your employees the opportunity to do this as part of their work is very fulfilling and can increase engagement, employee retention and workplace happiness.

Want to partner with a community organisation?

Find a project that inspires you and reap all of the personal and business benefits that come with supporting what you believe in. When companies support communities both become better places to live, work and do business.

To find out how to offset your emissions by working with Glasgow Community Energy get in touch and let’s work together to make business and communities come together for good.

Guest blog by Daniel Musenga-Grant
Director, DMG Environmental Consultancy

Filed Under: News

A community-led solution addressing the climate emergency

19 January 2020 By Ellie Harrison

Jim Lee, Claire Williams and Ellie Harrison from Glasgow Community Energy at the Climate Strike in George Square on 29 November 2019.

We’ve been developing the Glasgow Community Energy project over the last four years as a community-led solution addressing the climate emergency. Inspired by the successful Edinburgh Community Solar Co-operative, launched in 2015, Glasgow Community Energy is a new community-owned renewable energy co-operative for the city of Glasgow. Over the next few months, we plan to install solar panels on the roofs of up to nine large public/private buildings across the city and to launch a ‘Community Share Offer’ so that people all over Glasgow can get involved.

In April 2019, Scotland’s First Minister declared a ‘climate emergency’, recognising the urgent need to decarbonise our economy in order to fight climate change. On 16 May 2019, Glasgow City Council also voted to declare a ‘climate emergency’, and on 26 September 2019 the Council’s City Administration Committee approved the Recommendations of its Climate Emergency Working Group, which brought forward the city’s target for carbon neutrality from 2037 to 2030. Recommendation 4.5 explicitly supports the Glasgow Community Energy project, stating that:

Local communities should be able to invest in low carbon solutions through mechanisms such as co-operative business models. There is a good opportunity to develop partnerships which will enable residents to support renewable energy in the city and to get local benefit from these resources. We recommend that the Council’s business support and planning services are made available to support community investment in renewable energy, including the Glasgow Community Energy Co-operative.

Glasgow Community Energy has a key role to play in our city’s efforts to urgently decarbonise. Once up and running, we aim to generate up to 320,000kWh/year of clean, green energy for Glasgow saving us 82 tonnes of carbon every year. But because we are a co-operative, we are also helping fulfil the Council’s aim to ‘devolve power to residents’. Our project is founded on the seven co-operative principles, which will ensure it remains an open and inclusive initiative that anyone can join and get involved.

Please do join our newsletter so that you can be the first to hear when our ‘Community Share Offer’ is launched and to find out about other exciting ways to get involved.

Ellie Harrison
Chair, Glasgow Community Energy

Filed Under: News

Community Energy Workshops

20 August 2019 By Claire Williams

Community Energy Workshops

Glasgow Community Energy’s autumn workshop series is free and open to all. Come along to learn more about renewable energy cooperatives, local energy plans and community activism.

Benny Talbot

Monday 26 August 2019, 6-9pm
Community Energy: What, Why, How?
Benny Talbot, Community Energy Scotland

Claire Williams

Monday 9 September 2019, 6-9pm
Community Action Projects
Claire Williams, Community Organiser

Calum Watkins

Monday 23 September 2019, 6-9pm
Energy and its Uses
Calum Watkins

Zoe Dickson

Monday 7 October 2019, 6-9pm
Financing Community Projects
Zoe Dickson, Energy4All

Fraser Stewart

Monday 21 October 2019, 6-9pm
Energy, Politics and Grassroots Action
Fraser Stewart

Filed Under: News

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About

For us ‘community energy’ has a double meaning. Glasgow Community Energy aims to connect and empower local people through community-ownership and democratic involvement in our renewable energy co-operative, as well as by inspiring and sustaining community activism through our Community Benefit Fund.

News

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Glasgow Community Energy
1 month ago

Free Online Event: Community Energy & Muslim Communities

Free online knowledge-sharing event exploring how community energy can benefit Muslim communities across Scotland and the wider UK.
📅 Wednesday 29 October 2025
🕒 3:00 – 4:30pm
💻 Online (via Eventbrite)
🔗 Register: www.eventbrite.co.uk/e/community-energy-and-muslim-communities-tickets-1746293734569
Hosted as part of the Energy Learning Network, this webinar will:
⚡ Highlight how mosques and community organisations can reduce carbon emissions and energy costs through renewable energy projects.
🏠 Explore ways to support communities with energy advice to stay safe, warm, and resilient, reducing the impact of high bills.
🌿 Discuss how Islamic values align with the principles of sustainability and community energy.
💬 Feature inspiring case studies from Muslim community organisations and energy projects across the UK.
Please share widely - all are welcome! 🙌
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Community energy and Muslim communities

www.eventbrite.co.uk

Examples and lessons of community energy and Muslim community organisations collaboration from across the UK.
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Glasgow Community Energy
4 months ago

🙌Great evening chatting about the potential for community energy in Easterhouse @pavillionyouth - thanks to everyone who came along!

💪We're looking forward to working with local groups to develop people-powered energy for the community.

✉️DM if you missed it and want to learn more!
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