February 5, 2020 -There is synergy with the people of Cal Solar. And, after formalizing that connection through its worker-owned cooperative, Cal Solar has cast a wider, synergetic net through Amicus Solar Cooperative. Amicus Solar is a member-owned purchasing cooperative of over 50 high-quality, independent, values-driven solar energy companies in all 50 states, Washington DC, Canada and Puerto Rico.

CalSolar Co-Op Staff and Board Members Photo: Akim Aginsky

Stephen Irvin is president and CEO of Amicus. โ€œI helped start a solar company very similar to Cal Solar in Colorado in 2005 with a college buddy and other friends, Namaste Solarโ€ he said. โ€œWe started it as an employee owned business from the get-go. We believed in sharing the benefits and the risk and responsibility. We believed in that business model.โ€

Irvin said they didnโ€™t know about cooperatives. They wanted to create a business that would promote the use of solar energy. A few years later in about 2009, very large solar companies, moved in. โ€œThey were very disruptive,โ€ Irvin said. โ€œThey came in hot and heavy, and we were concerned.โ€

They wanted to keep Namaste Solar employee-owned.

โ€œOne way to do that was to tap the power of coming together with other companies for a common goal: Buying power.โ€

Amicus is a Latin word for friend. It is fitting for the mission to create a cooperative.

โ€œWe said, letโ€™s create and own equally a purchasing cooperative,โ€ Irvin said. โ€œThis business model is time tested and proven. The most common is Ace Hardware. It is the exact business model. Ace Hardware Cooperative.โ€

Ace Hardware stores are each independently owned and operated, and all are part of the Ace Hardware Cooperative. They pool their buying power to compete against the larger companies.

As a group, Amicus uses their collective buying power. Discounts get passed on to the companies in the co-op, such as Cal Solar.

โ€œThe goal is lowering the cost for their customers and puts more solar out there,โ€ Irvin said. โ€œIt helps people go solar. And itโ€™s helping Cal Solar stay independently owned and operated. Not to be rolled up into a bigger group. Thatโ€™s the big thing it does.โ€

Solar financing

Reducing the cost of loans and financing also gets passed on to customers. โ€œWe say, Bank XYZ, weโ€™ll bring $50M of solar loans to you, can you give discounts? Instead of one at a time, itโ€™s sort of negotiated up front,โ€ Irvin said. โ€œNow Cal Solar has the ability to tap into this brain trust with Amicus.โ€

Working collaboration

There is also an app available to each company. โ€œAt any time an engineer can open the Amicus app to ask a question. They have access now to close to 4,000 solar professionals. Everyone helps each other,โ€ Irvin said. โ€œItโ€™s classic cooperative. The more you give the more you get. Everyone helps each other out. Cal Solar answers questions as well. Theyโ€™ve already been doing that. Cal Solar is almost 20 years old. The average age is16. Cal Solar has a lot of experience. And now they have the buying power and brain power of an enormous company with the benefits of staying local.โ€