Politics & Government

Bucks County Takes Steps To Activate Renewable Energy Purchasing

As a member of SEP, Bucks County has started receiving electricity through wholesale market purchasing.

The Bucks County Administration building in Doylestown.
The Bucks County Administration building in Doylestown. (Jeff Werner/Patch)

DOYLESTOWN, PA — As part of the Sustainable Energy Partnership of Southeast PA (SEP), Bucks County has taken the first major step toward purchasing low, stable, and transparent-cost electricity for county operations.

As members of the SEP, Bucks, Chester, Delaware and Montgomery counties have started receiving electricity through wholesale market purchasing.

In August 2024, the SEP’s Energy Board, formed to govern the group’s purchasing program, adopted the renewable energy purchasing strategy that sets an overall goal: By 2035, all four counties will purchase 100 percent of their operations’ electricity from renewable sources. The strategy specifies interim targets of 25 percent by 2026, 75 percent by 2030, and 90 percent by 2032.

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“True energy independence and sustainability requires leadership, and the Sustainable Energy Partnership of Southeast PA is a great example of local leaders acting as leaders,” said Bucks County Commissioner Chair Bob Harvie. “This partnership reflects years of collaboration and effort focused on delivering clean, affordable and reliable energy to our region.”

The SEP renewable energy strategy also contains guidelines for future power purchase agreements such as sourcing energy from diversified generation sources; prioritizing projects within the Delaware Valley; and prioritizing new projects under development (as opposed to existing energy generation facilities) to more directly contribute to the development of clean energy projects.

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Through the SEP, the counties will also have improved access to, and purchasing power for procuring renewable energy and will be able to on-board additional public entities to the partnership over time.

Prior to the establishment of SEP, all four counties purchased Green-E Renewable Energy Credits to offset each megawatt hour of conventional energy purchased.

SEP Energy Board Vice Chair Julie Bookheimer said, “Meeting the goal of 100 percent renewable electricity will involve supplementing those renewable energy credits with procurement of energy from local (mid-Atlantic) solar, wind, and hydroelectric projects, as well as on-site renewable energy at county facilities, and other strategic projects and partnerships.”

With the support of its electricity supplier, WGLES, and its energy consultant, EnelX, SEP is currently exploring renewable energy projects with which the counties could consider a power purchase agreement or leading the development of a new energy project using federal incentives.

In December 2024 the SEP Board adopted guidelines to enable the addition of new members including municipalities, public school systems, and municipal authorities.

“Adding new public members that have similar goals of transitioning to renewable energy will amplify the SEP’s purchasing power and impact, to the benefit of all,” added Bookheimer.

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