36 °F Ocean City, US
April 21, 2026

Somers Point charges ahead with project

Contract awarded for solar energy canopy for city

By CRAIG D. SCHENCK/Sentinel staff

SOMERS POINT — City Council has taken another step toward greater energy independence by awarding a contract for installation of a solar canopy on public property.

The governing body entered into agreement Aug. 20 with National Energy Partners for installation and operation of a ground solar photovoltaic energy system, otherwise known as a solar canopy.

The city began looking at the idea in January, when City Council approved seeking bids for a solar electric canopy system financed through a power purchase agreement.

City Council President Janice Johnston said at the time that the solar farm would be located at the end of Defeo Lane where the city parks some of its municipal vehicles, just across the street from the municipal tennis courts.

City Administrator Jason Frost said the project would be funded through a power purchase agreement in which the contractor would build it, maintain it and insure it.

Councilman Sean McGuigan, who proposed the project, said he learned there is significant savings to be had and was duty-bound to pursue it.

The Ward I representative said the city looked at two options — placing solar panels on the roof of multiple city-owned buildings or erecting one large solar farm on the 3- to 4-acre property where there used to be a sewer plant.

City engineer Greg Schneider said the size of the project would be based on the city’s energy usage. He said National Energy Partners will determine how many panels are necessary and secure approval from the state Board of Public Utilities.

McGuigan said discussion is under way about how much power the meter at the site can handle, noting that may reduce the size of the project. 

Schneider said ideally the canopy would be 140 feet by 175 feet.

McGuigan had envisioned powering all city properties with the solar canopy. If that is not possible, he said, the city would look at some roof-top systems to make up the difference.

“This is a no-brainer no matter what the size,” he said. “It is a revenue plus for the city and it’s a step toward more green energy, which is sorely needed as we move forward.”

McGuigan said the Somers Point Green Team has been very involved in the project. The team is active in Sustainable NJ, which rates municipalities based on their level of sustainability.

McGuigan said the city has achieved Sustainable NJ’s bronze level and hopes to get to silver or gold through this project.

He said if all goes as planned, the city would save more than $100,000 in energy costs annually.

Related articles

After outcry, Ocean City votes down occupancy tax

Hotel, motel owners said after soft 2024, local tax would hurt them, city OCEAN CITY — After impassioned pleas from representatives of the resort’s hotels and motels, who said they faced a soft 2024 season and don’t want visitors priced out of the market, Ocean City Council unanimously voted down a 3 percent transient space […]

‘The Man Who Came to Dinner’ opens Gateway season

SOMERS POINT – Gateway Playhouse in Somers Point will kick off its 2025 Mainstage Season with the George S. Kaufman and Moss Hart comedy classic “The Man Who Came to Dinner.” The play will run one weekend only, April 4-6. Originally set in the 1930s in a small town in Ohio in the weeks leading […]