Building a just energy future together: Join the REC Co-lab this March

It’s 2025. That fact alone is a lot to deal with in the United States, especially for those who understand the urgent imperative to transition to a just, democratic, and inclusive energy system, powered by clean, renewable energy.
With the current administration ideologically committed to toxic and inefficient forms of energy of the past—fossil fuels and fossil fuel infrastructure—even thinking about the energy system might feel dispiriting.
That is, until you realize that most of the United States’ landmass is covered by cooperative utilities that are just waiting for residents to get activated and get involved. Not only do rural electric cooperatives cover a majority of the US, serving 42 million people while powering over 20 million homes, farms, and businesses, but they also are, in fact, cooperatives.
This means that member-owners can get involved in the governance of rural electric cooperatives and shape their local energy ecosystem.
To deepen the understanding of how to do that, Shareable and the Rural Power Coalition are launching the Rural Electric Cooperative Co-lab at the beginning of March 2025.
The stakes couldn’t be higher. A total investment of $40 billion in the Just Transition hangs in the balance!
What gives us hope is that the funding for electric co-ops is actually something that could be successfully defended.
But it will take a lot more people, organizations, and rural farms and businesses to get involved—and quickly.
The Co-lab will commence on Tuesday, March 4th, with an Introduction to Rural Electric Cooperatives. This first session will explain the basics of what electric co-ops are, a little bit of their history, and how they offer enormous potential to increase democracy in our energy system, and can use the cooperative decision-making power of the people to supercharge the energy transition.
The following seven sessions in this learning series will explore topics like grid reliability, funding sources and financing mechanisms, governance and elections, engaging policymakers, community benefits, and much more.
Each session will be led by multiple issue-area experts. The sessions will take place on Tuesdays at 1pm PT/4pm ET for eight weeks. The full list of sessions is listed below.
For more information about the series, electric co-ops, and the Rural Power Coalition, visit: www.ruralpower.us/colab
The Co-lab is free, and participants can choose to attend all sessions or drop in for specific topics of interest. Registration is open to anyone who wishes to learn more about how electric co-ops work and how to engage with them.
Register Now

Co-lab Schedule

March 4: Introduction to Rural Electric Cooperatives
In this first co-lab session held on Tuesday, March 4th, presenters will explain the basics of what Rural Electric Cooperatives

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