News & Updates  ·  January 27, 2025

North Fork Valley Team Wins $200,000 DOE Community Power Accelerator Prize

Colorado Farm & Food Alliance leads effort to advance in the Department of Energy’s national community solar competition. Read the Daily Sentinel article here.

The U.S. Department of Energy announced this month that a North Fork Valley solar partnership is one of four teams nationally to win a $200,000 Community Power Accelerator Prize. The team now advances to the third and final round, competing for an additional $150,000 prize in this community solar competition sponsored by the DOE National Solar Energy Technologies Office.

The Colorado Farm & Food Alliance-led team will use the award for engineering and other studies at the Thistle Whistle Community Solar project near Hotchkiss, and to study the feasibility of a second installation at a former coal mine site near Paonia. Both locations are in Delta County, Colorado.

$200,000
Round 2 prize awarded
4 of 4
National winners selected
$150,000
Round 3 prize available

What the Award Will Fund

Partners in developing these projects include Colorado Farm & Food Alliance, Thistle Whistle Community Solar, Mirasol Agrivoltaics, and Switchback Restoration. The award advances at least two community solar projects, starting with the agrivoltaic array at Thistle Whistle Farm — pairing agricultural production with solar energy and delivering clean power to local farms and residents through the DMEA grid.

The second project is in early pre-development near Paonia, focused on mine-site remediation and climate harm reduction at a former coal mine, alongside an additional community-solar benefit.

“I am eager to see this project completed, to benefit my farm and to help provide energy cost savings to other local farms and households. The Community Power prize has been vital in helping to keep this project moving forward.”

Mark Waltermire — Owner, Thistle Whistle Farm

What Thistle Whistle Community Solar Will Do

Clean energy generation
Renewable electricity for local communities through the DMEA grid
Agricultural land preservation
Dual-use farming practices keep land in active production
Energy equity
Cost savings returned to community subscribers
Farm economic opportunity
New economic pathways for local agricultural producers
Research & documentation
Best practices for agrivoltaic design, water conservation, and crop yield study
Habitat & pollinators
Wildlife corridor monitoring and pollinator-friendly vegetation management

“This recognition from the Department of Energy validates our vision for community-based rural renewables that support both our agricultural heritage and greater energy equity. These projects demonstrate how rural communities can lead the way in innovative clean energy solutions that preserve farmland, benefit residents and integrate with local livelihoods.”

Pete Kolbenschlag — Colorado Farm & Food Alliance, Prize Team Captain

What Comes Next

In Round 3, teams must demonstrate they have secured the funding necessary to develop their community solar projects. The team presented their vision at the Community Power PitchFest at DOE Headquarters in Washington, D.C. on March 6, 2025.

The Community Power Accelerator Prize is part of the American Made Challenge program, funded by the Bipartisan Infrastructure Law passed by Congress in 2021.

About the organizations
Colorado Farm & Food Alliance
Provides a platform for rural leadership to develop and implement local solutions that model climate action and strengthen farm and food system resilience. Named partner of the Community Power Accelerator Prize.
Mirasol Agrivoltaics
A Colorado 501(c)(3) nonprofit with a mission to educate about and help develop community solar projects in the North Fork Valley — filling a leadership role in supporting clean energy, cost savings, and community-based solutions.
Press contact: Pete Kolbenschlag, CO Farm & Food Alliance — pete@colofarmfood.org
Mirasol Agrivoltaics: MirasolAgrivoltaic@gmail.com