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☀️ Solar Energy/Community Solar

Community Solar: Los Angeles vs Norwalk

How do community solar rules compare between Los Angeles, CA and Norwalk, CA?

Los Angeles and Norwalk have similar restriction levels.

Los Angeles, CA

Los Angeles County

Few Restrictions

Los Angeles Department of Water and Power runs community solar through the Solar Rooftops Program and LADWP Rule 25, letting renters and apartment dwellers subscribe to shared offsite arrays under California SB-43's statewide community solar pilot.

View full Los Angeles rules →

Norwalk, CA

Los Angeles County

Few Restrictions

California SB-43 created the Green Tariff Shared Renewables program letting LA County renters and shaded-roof homeowners subscribe to community solar shares without on-site panels. LA County Waterworks pilots and Southern California Edison Green Rate provide enrollment paths countywide.

View full Norwalk rules →

Key Facts Comparison

FactLos AngelesNorwalk
OperatorLADWP municipal utility-
Statewide frameworkCalifornia SB-43-
ProgramsSolar Rooftops, Feed-In Tariff-
Eligible customersRenters, apartments, businesses-
Interconnection ruleLADWP Rule 25-
State authority-SB-43 Public Utilities Code §2833
Utility provider-Southern California Edison
Subscriber benefit-Bill credits, avoided cost
Low-income discount-20 percent enhanced rate
County pilots-Waterworks Districts rooftop

Highlighted rows indicate differences between cities.

Los Angeles FAQ

Can apartment renters in LA subscribe to community solar?

Yes. LADWP's Shared Solar and Feed-In Tariff offerings let renters and businesses without rooftop access purchase a share of offsite generation and receive proportional bill credits each month, similar to SB-43 programs statewide.

What is the Solar Rooftops Program?

LADWP leases unused commercial and apartment rooftops, installs utility-owned solar, and pays the property owner. Energy flows directly to the LADWP grid, supporting the city's 100 percent renewable goal.

Norwalk FAQ

I rent in East LA. Can I subscribe to community solar?

Yes. Renters and shaded-roof homeowners in Southern California Edison territory can enroll in the Green Rate or Community Renewables programs online without installing panels. Income-qualified households get the enhanced Disadvantaged Communities Green Tariff.

How much can I save with community solar?

Standard subscribers see modest savings or premium pricing depending on the contract. Income-qualified Disadvantaged Communities Green Tariff subscribers receive a 20 percent discount on their share of solar generation, often a meaningful monthly reduction.

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