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B26-0065 • 2025

Solar Shade Expansion Amendment Act of 2025

Solar Shade Expansion Amendment Act of 2025

Budget Energy
Active

The official status still shows this bill as active or still awaiting another formal step.

Sponsor
Allen
Last action
2025-03-31
Official status
Under Council Review
Effective date
Not listed

Plain English Breakdown

The official source material does not provide detailed information on financial incentives or funding amounts, leaving these aspects open-ended.

Solar Shade Expansion Amendment Act

This act requires the District government to study and fund solar canopy installations in various locations to provide shade and generate clean energy.

What This Bill Does

  • Requires DOEE to publish a feasibility study by January 1, 2026, analyzing at least 20 sites for installing solar canopies, including buildings or land owned by the District, roadways, sidewalks, bike lanes, cycletracks, and private property.
  • Recommends that the District's capital improvement plan include funding for five projects starting in fiscal year 2027 to install solar canopies at specific locations identified as feasible.
  • Allows DOEE to issue grants to private entities to support solar canopy installations on their property.
  • Requires new capital projects after January 1, 2030, to include solar canopies if feasible.

Who It Names or Affects

  • The District government and its departments
  • Private property owners who receive grants for installing solar canopies

Terms To Know

Solar canopy
A structure that elevates solar panels above the ground, providing shade while generating clean energy.
Capital improvement plan
The District's budget for major projects and infrastructure improvements.

Limits and Unknowns

  • Does not specify how much funding will be allocated for solar canopy installations.
  • Details on financial incentives, such as grants and tax exemptions, are to be determined in future studies.

Bill History

  1. 2025-03-31 Council of the District of Columbia LIMS

    Public Hearing on B26-0065 View Public Hearing Record

  2. 2025-03-14 Council of the District of Columbia LIMS

    Notice of Public Hearing Published in the District of Columbia Register

  3. 2025-03-12 Council of the District of Columbia LIMS

    Notice of Public Hearing filed in the Office of Secretary by Transportation and the Environment

  4. 2025-02-04 Council of the District of Columbia LIMS

    Referred to Committee on Transportation and the Environment

  5. 2025-01-31 Council of the District of Columbia LIMS

    Notice of Intent to Act on B26-0065 Published in the District of Columbia Register

  6. 2025-01-17 Council of the District of Columbia LIMS

    B26-0065 Introduced by Councilmember Allen at Office of the Secretary

Official Summary Text

Solar Shade Expansion Amendment Act of 2025

Current Bill Text

Read the full stored bill text
January 17, 2025

Nyasha Howard, Secretary
Council of the District of Columbia
1350 Pennsylvania Avenue, NW
Washington, D.C. 20004

Secretary Howard:

Today, along with Councilmembers Bonds, Frumin, Henderson, Lewis George, Nadeau, and
Robert White, I am introducing the “Solar Shade Expansion Amendment Act of 202 5”. Please
find enclosed a signed copy of the legislation.

The summer of 2024 was one of the hottest seasons recorded since 1880, narrowly beating heat
records set just a year earlier in 2023.1 The scientific evidence has made it abundantly clear that
human activity is the most significant driver of the changes in climate we are experiencing locally
and around the world. Burning fossil fuels – such as coal, oil, and gas – emits greenhouse gasses
that amplify the Earth’s natural greenhouse effect , warming the planet at a dangerous rate. In
addition to their impact on climate, the burning of fossil fuels also has deleterious effects on
human health, as well as air and water quality.

For its part, the District has planned to transition away from fossil fuels and towards clean,
renewable sources of energy. For example, the District's Renewable Portfolio Standard requires
that 100% of the electricity sold in the city be from renewable sources by 2032 – 5.5% of which
must be solar energy. But there is a pressing need to both accelerate our progress towards that
goal while also alleviating the impact of extreme weather – especially on our most vulnerable
populations, including children.

Solar canopies are a promising tool that can both help mitigate the human impacts on climate
while also providing relief from rising temperatures. Solar canopies are structures that elevate
solar panels above the ground, generating solar energy while providing shade. Solar canopies
help maximize use of limited space in the District for solar panel installations. Solar canopies have

1 National Aeronautics and Space Administration, NASA Finds Summer 2024 Hottest to Date (September 11, 2024),
https://www.nasa.gov/earth/nasa-finds-summer-2024-hottest-to-date/.
already been mounted over parking decks 2 and school playgrounds3 in the District. In other
countries, like South Korea, for example, solar canopies have also been installed to provide shade
over bike lanes.4

This legislation would require that the District government identify 20 sites, ranging from
playgrounds and parks to sidewalks, bike lanes, and roads, that could benefit from solar canopies.
The goals are to provide shade, reduce heat exposure, and provide clean energy to our power
grid all at once. The bill then requires funding in the District’s Capital Improvements Plan for five
capital projects to include solar shade as soon as the FY27 budget and all projects beginning in
FY28. It also permits the Department of Energy and Environment to issue grants to private
entities in pursuit of solar shade projects.

Sincerely,

Councilmember Charles Allen, Ward 6
Chairperson, Committee on Transportation & the Environment

2 Innovation District, D.C. leaders unveil city’s largest solar canopy at Children’s National Research & Innovation
Campus (April 27, 2021), https://innovationdistrict.childrensnational.org/dc-leaders-unveil-citys-largest-solar-
canopy-at-research-innovation-campus/.
3 https://www.ludlowtaylor.org/spaces/
4 Hakyung Kate Lee, Solar panel bike lane generates eco-friendly energy in South Korea, ABC NEWS (September 25,
2022), https://abcnews.go.com/International/solar-panel-bike-lane-generates-eco-friendly-
energy/story?id=90197800.

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_____________________________ _____________________________ 1
Councilmember Anita Bonds Councilmember Charles Allen 2
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_____________________________ _____________________________ 6
Councilmember Matthew Frumin Councilmember Christina Henderson 7
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_____________________________ _____________________________ 11
Councilmember Janeese Lewis George Councilmember Brianne K. Nadeau 12
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_____________________________ 16
Councilmember Robert C. White, Jr. 17
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A BILL 20
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IN THE COUNCIL OF THE DISTRICT OF COLUMBIA 25
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_________________________ 27
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To amend the Clean and Affordable Energy Amendment Act of 2008 to require that the 30
Department of Energy and the Environment publish a feasibility study regarding the 31
installation of solar canopies in the District, to require that the District’s capital 32
improvement plan include funding for the installation of solar canopies, to authorize the 33
Department of the Energy and the Environment to issue grants to support the installation 34
of solar canopies , to require that the Department of Energy and the Environment update 35
the original study , and to require that new capital projects included in the capital 36
improvement plan for which the installation of solar canopies is possible shall provide for 37
the installation of solar canopies on some portion or portions of the capital project’s 38
footprint. 39
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BE IT ENACTED BY THE COUNCIL OF THE DISTRICT OF COLUMBIA, That this 41
act may be cited as the “Solar Shade Expansion Amendment Act of 2025”. 42

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Sec. 2. The Clean and Affordable Energy Amendment Act of 2008, effective October 22, 43
2008, (D.C. Law 17-250; D.C. Official Code § 8–1773.01 et seq.), is amended by adding a new 44
section 218 to read as follows: 45
“Sec. 218. Solar canopy feasibility study; capital funding requirements and grantmaking 46
authority; updated study. 47
“(a)(1) By January 1, 2026 , DOEE shall conduct and publish a study analyzing the 48
feasibility of installing solar canopies to expand solar energy generation while providing shade in 49
at least 20 locations in the District, including at least 5 of each of the following: 50
“(A) Buildings or land owned by the District , such as recreation centers, 51
parks, pools, playgrounds, parking lots, and parking decks, selected after consultation with the 52
Department of General Services and the Department of Parks and Recreation; 53
“(B) District roadways , sidewalks , bike lanes, and cycletracks, selected 54
after consultation with the District Department of Transportation; and 55
“(C) Private property, such as parking decks, surface parking lots, and 56
common areas in commercial buildings and residential buildings, selected after consultation with 57
the Department of Buildings. 58
“(2) The study shall: 59
“(A) Compare, between various locations in the District, the: 60
“(i) Potential to generate solar energy; 61
“(ii) Desirability or benefits of providing shade; 62
“(iii) Costs of installing solar canopies; and 63
“(iv) Difficulty of installing solar canopies, including any legal or 64
administrative barriers unrelated to cost; 65

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“(B) Recommend settings, based on the factors described in subparagraph 66
(A) of this paragraph, where the installation of solar canopies should be prioritized; and 67
“(C) Identify at least 5 specific locations in the District where the 68
installation of at least 500 square feet of solar canopies can feasibly be installed during Fiscal Year 69
2027. 70
“(b) Beginning January 1, 2027: 71
“(1) The multiyear capital improvement plan proposed by the Mayor in the annual 72
budget pursuant to § 47–339.01(a) shall , for any project encompassing any of the locations 73
identified in subsection (a)(1) of this section, include funding sufficient to support the installation 74
of solar canopies; and 75
“(2) DOEE may issue grants to private entities to support the installation of solar 76
canopies on private property in settings recommended by the study as described in subsection 77
(a)(1)(C). 78
“(c)(1) No later than September 30, 2028, DOEE shall publish an updated study analyzing 79
the outcomes of any solar canopies installed at locations identified in the original study. 80
“(2) The updated study conducted pursuant to this subsection shall: 81
“(A) Update the comparison of factors described in subsection (a)(2)(A) of 82
this section; 83
“(B) Identify locations, based on the update d comparison described in 84
subparagraph (A), where the District should require the installation of other solar canopies in 85
public and private settings; 86
“(C) Recommend financial incentives, including grants and tax exemptions, 87
to facilitate the installation of solar canopies; and 88

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“(D) Describe any regulatory, administrative, or legislative changes that 89
would expedite or facilitate the installation of solar canopies across the District. 90
“(d) Beginning January 1, 2030, every new capital project included in the capital 91
improvement plan for which the installation of solar canopies is possible shall provide for the 92
installation of solar canopies on some portion or portions of the capital project’s footprint.”. 93
Sec. 3. Fiscal impact statement. 94
The Council adopts the fiscal impact statement in the committee report as the fiscal impact 95
statement required by section 4a of the General Legislative Procedures Act of 1975, approved 96
October 16, 2006 (120 Stat. 2038; D.C. Official Code § 1-301.47a). 97
Sec. 4. Effective date. 98
This act shall take effect after approval by the Mayor (or in the event of veto by the 99
Mayor, action by the Council to override the veto), a 30 -day period of congressional review as 100
provided in section 602(c)(1) of the District of Columbia Home Rule Act, approved December 24, 101
1973 (87 Stat. 813; D.C. Official Code § 1 -206.02(c)(1)), and publication in the District of 102
Columbia Register. 103