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Canndescent Completes Commercial-Scale Solar Project in Cannabis

The company has created a more sustainable growing model it calls greendoor, uniting renewable solar energy with the water-efficiency of indoor growing.


SANTA BARBARA, CA (March 18, 2019) – PRESS RELEASE – Canndescent has completed its commercial-scale solar project, powering its indoor production facility in Desert Hot Springs, Calif.  Delivering onsite, renewable energy, the 282.6 kilowatt system uses 734 solar modules on seven different carport structures to energize the company’s historic cannabis production facility, which also earned attention in 2016 as California’s first municipally permitted operation. The state-of-the-art, clean energy system offsets as much carbon annually as a 430-acre forest and reduces annual atmospheric carbon emissions by 365 metric tons (per NREL and EPA estimates).

As the first cannabis company to power an at-scale, indoor cultivation project with renewable solar energy, Canndescent provides a critical template for sustainability in an industry where outdoor growers tax water resources and indoor and light dep greenhouse growers consume an estimated 1 percent of the electricity produced in the United States. The project currently produces enough power to charge an estimated 20 percent of U.S. smartphones for a day and highlights a potential path to divorce agriculture from many of its negative environmental impacts. Cultivating indoors with solar power, the project marries the crop turns and water efficiency associated with indoor, hydroponic cultivation and the energy efficiency found in other forms of cultivation. Historically, the cannabis industry has chosen between indoor, outdoor and greenhouse approaches. With the first-of-its-kind solar project, the company creates a fourth choice it calls greendoor that unites water efficiency, energy efficiency and pesticide-free growing in an indoor format.

Aside from bridging traditional cultivation barriers, the solar-powered cannabis facility stands as a political iconoclast. It harmonizes the progressive themes of alternative energy and alternative medicine with the conservative theme of private enterprise, creating social impact in an Opportunity Zone. The company invested a combined $3.75 million to retrofit its 11,000-square-foot warehouse for solar and cannabis production and produces an estimated 10,000 pounds of boutique cannabis in a city where 34 percent of the population lives at or below the poverty line.

Scott Matas, mayor of Desert Hot Springs, said, “Since inception, Canndescent has lifted up our community contributing $500,000 in local cannabis taxes and creating 150 jobs. Adding renewable energy to what was the first cultivation project to open in the Coachella Valley, Canndescent continues to light a path for others to follow.”

Canndescent CEO Adrian Sedlin said, “We commissioned the solar project because the modern consumer deserves and demands that we create exceptional products using exceptional practices. As an industry coming of age right now, it's natural and appropriate for the cannabis industry and Canndescent to lead business community in addressing some of the world’s pressing challenges.”

Already exceeding The California Energy Commission’s requirement for new nonresidential buildings to have rooftop solar by 2023, Canndescent constructed the project in eight weeks after a two-year struggle to win project approval and financing.

Canndescent’s Chief Compliance Officer Tom DiGiovanni said, “Given the restrictions around cannabis banking and lending and the complexities of energy projects and California civil construction in general, this was extraordinarily difficult to pull off. Nevertheless, we got it done and have established a template for the ‘green industry’ to go greener.” 

To accelerate adoption of solar power and greendoor practices within cannabis, Canndescent will release a white paper in 2Q19 sharing its solar project plans as opensource. The company has also released a video for the project.

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