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  • Orange County nonprofit races to beat federal cuts
    A view of houses with solar panels on the side of the hill.
    Irvine's University Hills neighborhood is where OC Goes Solar got its start helping homeowners install solar power systems.

    Topline:

    An Orange County nonprofit called OC Goes Solar is racing to help as many people as possible install solar panels on their homes. The urgency comes after Congress passed — and President Donald Trump — signed the One Big Beautiful Bill Act.

    The background: Trump’s bill cut, among other things, a residential solar tax credit that covers 30% of the cost for homeowners to install solar panels and a battery. The Biden-era policy was originally on the books through 2032. Now it ends this year.

    Read on ... to learn more about how one local nonprofit is working to help homeowners install solar before the credit expires.

    If you want to cut the costs of installing solar panels and a battery on your home, you’d better install now.

    On July 4, President Donald Trump signed the One Big Beautiful Bill Act into law. Among other things, the law ended many of the clean energy incentives established by the Biden administration’s Inflation Reduction Act, including eliminating the 30% residential solar tax credit by Dec. 31, 2025.

    The cost of installing solar is on average around $30,000. That credit helps reduce the cost of necessary roof repairs, the solar panels and battery themselves, and electrical panel upgrades.

    But now, that credit expires at the end of this year, instead of in 2032, plus a two-year phaseout.

    “Losing that tax incentive is just a huge, huge loss and a disservice to the community and energy independence,” said Senait Forthal, founder and executive director of Irvine-based nonprofit OC Goes Solar. Since 2017, the group has helped more than 800 homeowners install rooftop solar systems.

    Four people smile for a photo together on a sunny day. Three wear blue shirts; one wears a white collared shirt.
    Senait Forthal, second from right, founded the OC Goes Solar nonprofit. She's seen here at an event at the Great Park.
    (
    Courtesy OC Goes Solar
    )

    Forthal worries that progress will stall significantly with the end of the tax credit.

    “ The federal government has quickly changed that solar incentive that really made solar accessible and affordable for so many people,” Forthal said.

    That’s why Forthal’s group is on a mission to help as many homeowners install solar before the credit expires, as well as take advantage of other local financial clean energy incentives.

    “The bottom line is that people have to make the investment by December 2025 to be able to take advantage of the solar tax credit,” Forthal said.

    Local clean energy incentives

    Forthal and fellow neighbors in faculty housing at UC Irvine organized OC Goes Solar in 2017 after realizing a lot of people wanted to install a solar system but couldn’t navigate the process. Forthal has a background in clean energy consulting, so she took the lead. That first year, 74 of their neighbors installed solar.

    In 2019, the group became a nonprofit, and in 2022 it partnered with the city of Irvine to help facilitate the city’s solar incentive effort, Solarize Irvine.

    The group walks homeowners through the application and financial incentives processes. They also vet local contractors and negotiate group rates and warranties to drive down costs — Forthal said they usually cut 10% to 20% of the cost that way — and host educational workshops about installing solar that are free to the public.

    Learn more
    • What: OC Goes Solar is hosting a free public workshop, in partnership with the city of Irvine, about navigating solar installation. 

    • When: Aug. 20, 6:30 to 8 p.m.

    • Where: Sweet Shade Ability Center, 15 Sweet Shade, Irvine

    Forthal said interested homeowners should start the process as soon as possible because there will likely be a bottleneck of demand closer to when the credit ends.

    “Solar takes between eight to 10 weeks to complete,” Forthal said. “ Once you apply for permit, you have to wait for that. If you have an HOA, you have to get approval from the HOA. All these things take time.”

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