Inspiring People: Stories of Innovation and Service
Meghan Wood, co-founder of Raya Power, explains how solar power, despite its substantial promise, is still out of reach for many families. In the U.S., even small plug-in solar systems can trigger complex utility rules, shutting out renters and middle-income households. In Puerto Rico, residents face some of the highest electricity rates in the country and hundreds of power outages each year. And in parts of California, high energy costs and an unstable grid leave families vulnerable to blackouts. Raya Power addresses these challenges with a compact, plug-and-play solar-battery system that can be installed in a backyard in just a couple of hours. It powers critical appliances during storms, helps reduce monthly energy bills, and works for households that can't install traditional rooftop solar. Meghan shares how this approach could democratize access to clean, resilient energy, making it as normal and essential as wifi, while giving communities a reliable solution when the grid fails. Meghan Wood founded Raya Power to help fill a huge market often ignored by residential solar companies: working class families who rent an apartment and might want to add "balcony solar." Wood aims to address that market by turning home solar into a product or appliance -- modular, plug-and-play, no permits required, and installed in a few hours. Raya Power has raised over $1.2 million and launched three pilots from New York City to Puerto Rico with more on the way. To learn more, go to: https://rayapower.com/ [https://rayapower.com/] https://www.instagram.com/rayapower_official/ [https://www.instagram.com/rayapower_official/]
159 episodios
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