Utah’s bottom-up approach to clean energy

By Jason Plautz | 05/29/2026 06:28 AM EDT

More than a dozen Utah communities are seeking clean power, even as their utility turns to fossil fuels.

A solar farm sits in Mona, Utah.

A solar farm sits in Mona, Utah, on Aug. 9, 2022. Rick Bowmer/AP

Like many utilities in the Trump era, Rocky Mountain Power is pulling back on its renewable energy plans. But more than a dozen Utah communities are taking matters into their own hands.

About 300,000 homes and businesses will soon be part of a novel, bottom-up program to bring new clean power to the state’s fossil-fuel-heavy grid. The Utah Renewable Communities initiative allows city and county governments to offset their electricity use with 100 percent renewable power, backed by a $4 monthly bill surcharge.

“There’s no other program available to our residents that is this affordable or this impactful to Midvale’s environmental and economic future,” said Dustin Gettel, mayor of the Salt Lake City suburb of Midvale.

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Midvale is set to vote Tuesday on whether to join 15 other communities that have signed up ahead of an enrollment deadline next week. Three other eligible communities have opted out, although one may reconsider.

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