Solar Powers Forward
Ouachita also worked hard to bring energy efficiency to local schools by installing new lighting and mini-split heating and air systems. This saved the schools about $17,000 each per year on their energy bills.
Moving forward with solar energy could change the community drastically. According to Cayce, the installation of solar was an uphill battle. Ouachita’s engineering team had their doubts, saying that it wouldn’t work in Arkansas. The cooperative went against their advice and dove in head first by installing a solar field at their headquarters to supply 92 percent of the office’s energy needs. By implementing solar, utility expenses for their office went down.
“The more we invested, the more we saved,” Cayce said at a recent conference on rural energy in Atlanta, Ga.
One of the biggest issues in rural areas is keeping people in the area instead of having them leave for jobs in the city.
“In the past twenty years we’ve had steady population decline,” says Cayce, “and we think energy efficiency and solar is bringing that back.”
The numbers back his word. Aerojet Rocketdyne Holdings, the company that bought Camden’s 12-megawatt solar array, has seen an increase in the number of people it employs since the implementation of solar. Aerojet previously had 800 employees, but after the solar array went online in 2016, that number has jumped to 1200 with an additional 150 job openings on the way.
“What an exciting time it is to be in utilities,” Cayce remarked.
All of this energy is coming at a lower cost to Aerojet, which means that Ouachita is making less money off of energy. It seems counterproductive; why would any utility supplier want to sell energy at a lower price and decrease their profit? “Well,” says Cayce, “We’re in the business of serving our members, not selling electricity.”
Connecting a Nation
While solar was an ambitious step forward, Ouachita didn’t stop there. In rural communities, access to the internet has been a problem. Trends show that rural areas are lagging behind in both speed and accessibility to the internet.
“We had a lot of people that would live in our territory but couldn’t because they couldn’t work from home because they didn’t have internet connection,” says Cayce. “People from our area didn’t really know what Netflix was.”
Ouachita is working to counteract this problem with ARIS High Speed Fiber Internet. ARIS is a joint company formed by Ouachita Electric Cooperative and South Arkansas Telephone that aims to bring up to 1GB internet speeds to the 9,500 homes of all Ouachita members. That’s ten times the normal speed offered by area cable companies. This is a great help to schools and businesses in the service area.
“The idea is that by combining energy efficiency and solar and high speed internet, we can make a formula for success in the future and it’s bringing growth back to our part of the world,” concludes Cayce.
So far it seems to be working well for Ouachita. Jobs are growing and people are saving money on their utility bills. Despite the all the previous setbacks, Ouachita continues supporting cleaner energy.
Only one uncertainty remains. If Ouachita can do it, why aren’t more rural electric cooperatives taking the same initiatives?