SWITCH YOUR ELECTRIC SUPPLY

TO GREEN RENEWABLE ENERGY

Data shows that residences, businesses, organizations & communities
can save money, help the environment, and fight climate change

 

REDUCE electric bill, and help move the world toward sustainable energy . NOTE: NJ "RPS" law requires electric supplier to enrich with ~23% Renewable Sources

 

JCP&L Energy Sources

 

SWITCH

 



100% renewable

1. BEST INVESTMENT: INSTALL SOLAR (shop with EnergySage, compare Sierra Club/SunPower Partnership); OR

2. JOIN A NJ COMMUNITY SOLAR PROJECT ; presentation by Solar Landscape, Asbury Park, developer of 50+ Community Solar projects ; provides 20% savings off your current utility electric bill ; SIGNUP HERE (NO strings; easy signup or stop with no penalty)
NOTE: At times your local electric utility area may have no available NJ community solar project. If so, wait a month or two and try again. 100s of NJ Community Solar projects are in various stages from initial planning through completion OR

 

3. SWITCH TO A GREEN SUPPLIER FOR YOUR HOME AND BUSINESS. NOTICE: Prices are likely HIGHER than your local utility and are MUCH higher than NJ Community Solar

HOW TO SWITCH?

·       Review and choose from the list of Renewable Electric Suppliers (ensure you are viewing the LATEST on-line file instead of an old cache file: refresh your browswer by clicking the circle chasing its tail in the top left of your browser window)

·       On-line signup takes only minutes. Fill out the form of the chosen vendor

·       Enter your choice of contract duration (typically 1, 2 or 3 years) explanation

YOU GAIN:

·       Eliminate electrical power emissions from traditional fossil fuel generators

·       Set an example for others to also fight CLIMATE CHANGE  

DISADVANTAGE : Green/clean electricity produced ANYWHERE in the U.S.
(Compare to cheaper NJ Communnity Solar, located in of YOUR local util
ity service area)

 

EARTH'S CHANGING CLIMATE ...https://climate.smiller.org
Steve Miller stevemiller@comcast.net ; DISCUSSION: https://electric.smiller.org/renewable-discussion.htm