Vol. IV · No. 1226 February 2026
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The Community Energy Record

Connecting cooperatives · Sharing kilowatt-hours · Building local power

Orkney Wind Collective exports 2.1 MWh this weekBristol Solar Terrace hits 6-month payback milestoneNew battery tariff guidance published by OfgemHebden Bridge community fund opens for applicationsScottish Borders cooperative signs grid connectionCornwall tidal pilot enters second year of operationOrkney Wind Collective exports 2.1 MWh this weekBristol Solar Terrace hits 6-month payback milestoneNew battery tariff guidance published by OfgemHebden Bridge community fund opens for applicationsScottish Borders cooperative signs grid connectionCornwall tidal pilot enters second year of operation

Lead Story · Scotland

How Twelve Households in Fife Cut Their Bills by 40% and Sold the Surplus Back

A retired electrical engineer, a parish councillor, and ten neighbours who had never spoken about energy — until the winter tariff arrived. What happened next became a blueprint that three other Scottish towns are now quietly following.

Terraced rooftops with solar panels catching morning light, chimneys soft against a misty sky

Kirkcaldy, Fife · January 2026 · Photo: Commune member archive

By Alasdair MacKinnonCommunity Correspondent

The electricity meter at number 14 Thistle Crescent used to tick like a guilty conscience. Now it runs backwards three days a week. What changed wasn't technology — it was the conversation that happened over a garden wall in March 2024, and the seventeen months of quiet, stubborn organising that followed.

Founder Portrait · No. 1
40% bill reduction12 householdsFife, Scotland

The Engineer Who Rewired His Street

Gordon Rennie, 67 · Retired Electrical Engineer · Kirkcaldy

Older man in a grey jumper pointing at an inverter display mounted on a brick wall, expression focused and satisfied

Gordon checks the inverter · 14 Thistle Crescent · Jan 2026

The grid doesn't care whose electrons they are. Neither do we. We just want them to stay local.

Gordon Rennie spent thirty-eight years working for Scottish Power before retiring to the same terrace he grew up on. When the winter 2023 tariff arrived — a 31% increase — he did what engineers do. He sat down with graph paper.

"I could see that eleven of the twelve houses on this row had south-facing roofs. That's not luck, that's geometry. And geometry is solvable."

Over the following spring he knocked on every door. Four people said yes immediately. Three said maybe. Two said they'd think about it. Three said no. By August he had a WhatsApp group and a shared spreadsheet. By the following February, the group had a Ofgem-registered cooperative, 47 panels across six rooftops, and a battery unit in the old coal shed at number 8.

The numbers, twelve months on

−40%

Avg. bill

£2,340

Export income

6.2t

CO₂ saved

The Kirkcaldy Solar Terrace cooperative is open to new members. Find cooperatives near you →

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Founder Portrait · No. 2
120 householdsBattery storageBristol, England

The Housing Association That Bought Its Own Battery

Priya Nair, 44 · Housing Association Director · Easton, Bristol

Town hall meeting with residents seated in rows, a woman at the front gesturing toward a projected energy diagram, mid-debate

Easton Community Hall · September 2024 · Residents' vote on battery funding

Priya Nair manages 120 homes across six streets in Easton. When energy prices spiked in 2022, she did the maths on behalf of every tenant who couldn't. The result was uncomfortable: her residents were collectively paying £180,000 a year more than they needed to.

"We had the roof space. We had the collective purchasing power. What we didn't have was a legal structure that let us act as a single buyer." She found one — a community benefit society — and spent eight months learning how to use it.

We had the roof space. We had the collective purchasing power. We just needed the right sentence in the right document.

The 80kWh battery went in last March. Charged overnight on the cheap rate, it powers the communal areas through peak hours and exports the remainder at the flex tariff. Net result: a 28% reduction in the association's energy bill and a £4,200 surplus that went directly into the tenant hardship fund.

−28%

Association bill

80kWh

Battery capacity

£4,200

Tenant fund surplus

18mo

Payback forecast

Priya advises housing associations on community benefit society structures. Ask her a question in the forum →

Founder Portrait · No. 3
Energy charterWind projectPowys, Wales

The Parish Councillor Who Wrote an Energy Charter at the Kitchen Table

Rhiannon Bowen, 52 · Parish Councillor & First-Time Solar Owner · Llanidloes

Rhiannon had four panels fitted in 2022 — "the cheapest option, the one that fitted the budget, no grand plan." She didn't think of herself as an energy person. Then her parish council asked her to look into whether the community hall could go solar. Six months later she had drafted a six-page energy charter that three neighbouring parishes have since adopted wholesale.

I'm not an engineer. I'm a school librarian. If I can write an energy charter, anyone with a kitchen table can write an energy charter.

The charter covers three things: shared procurement (bulk-buying panels and installation labour), shared export agreements (pooling the village's surplus under one Ofgem licence), and a community benefit fund — 5% of export income goes to the local food bank. The wind turbine application is still pending. Rhiannon expects it to take two more years. She is not in a hurry.

"Speed is a city thing. We're not going anywhere. The wind will still be blowing when the paperwork clears."

Two people shaking hands at a substation fence, countryside visible behind them, relaxed and confident

Rhiannon with the grid operator · Powys · Nov 2025

The charter template is available for any Commune member to download and adapt. Three parishes have already done so.

Get the template →

What the Llanidloes charter covers

01

Shared Procurement

Bulk-buying panels and labour as a single parish order. Average saving: 18% vs individual quotes.

02

Pooled Export Licence

All surplus generation registered under one Ofgem cooperative licence. Simpler, better rate.

03

Community Benefit Fund

5% of export income to local food bank. Voted in by residents, audited annually.

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The argument, in short

Gordon did it in Fife. Priya did it in Bristol. Rhiannon is doing it in Powys.

Your street has the same south-facing roofs. Your housing association has the same collective purchasing power. Your parish has the same wind. The only thing missing is the conversation — and that's what Commune is for.

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