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Wal-Mart Cheered, Jeered for Solar Power Efforts

3 min read

No matter the situation the world’s largest retailer involves itself in, rest assured, it will be analyzed, critiqued and questioned to excruciating levels. The latest issue is solar power.

Slate has a story on the Solar Energy Industries Association report on the top 25 corporations in terms of megawatts of solar capacity. Wal-Mart Stores Inc. of Bentonville leads the competition — with 105 megawatts installed — and the race isn’t even close. Kohl’s is second on the listing with 50 megawatts installed.

“Here’s another comparison that puts Walmart’s efforts into perspective: According to SEIA spokesman Ken Johnson, the company now has more solar capacity than 35 states and the District of Colombia. It lags behind California, Arizona, Colorado, Florida, Georgia, Hawaii, Maryland, Massachusetts, North Carolina, Nevada, New Jersey, New Mexico, New York, Pennsylvania and Texas. That’s it. (Last year, using a different data source, Bloomberg reported that Walmart had more capacity than 38 states).”

And the Arkansas-based company has announced plans to double its solar installations on its store rooftops by 2020. According to Wal-Mart, the move could save it as much as $1 billion a year in energy costs.

Ironically, the Institute for Local Self-Reliance, a nonprofit organization based in Washington, D.C., and Minneapolis, Minnesota, that promotes local solutions and sustainable community development, released a report Oct. 9 that claims the Walton family is doing all it can to undermine renewable energy policies.

“Since 2010, the Waltons have donated $4.5 million to more than 20 organizations, including the American Legislative Exchange Council (ALEC), Americans for Prosperity, and the American Enterprise Institute, which are leading the state campaigns against clean energy.”

In an email to Arkansas Business, Daphne Davis Moore, communications director for the Walton Family Foundation, refuted the ILSR claim, stating the organization was “incorrect regarding ALEC. The (Walton) foundation has not provided any funding to ALEC.”

Moore also provided the following Oct. 10 statement from the Walton Family Foundation on the ILSR report:

The Walton Family Foundation is proud of our decades-long track record investing in real solutions to tough environmental challenges. Over the last five years alone, we’ve invested $351 million in efforts to support real, lasting ecological restoration in the Gulf of Mexico, to tackle the water policy challenges in the Colorado River Basin, to conserve some of the most ecologically rich seascapes around the globe and to push for sustainable fisheries management that benefits fishing communities and families. Our grantees include many of the nation’s leading environmental groups, as well as local organizations working on behalf of the communities that depend directly on healthy rivers, oceans and wildlife.

This report ignores significant investments by the Walton Family Foundation with leading environmental groups. Instead, the author chooses to focus on a handful of grants, none of which were designated for renewable energy-related issues.

As a leading funder working to find lasting solutions to some of today’s most challenging societal issues – such as improving K-12 education and conserving critical marine and freshwater areas – the Walton Family Foundation works with many partners across a broad spectrum of beliefs. We are proud of this work and the impact of our many grantee partners on the lives of individuals and communities.

Another report released last year by ILSR found Wal-Mart’s greenhouse gas emissions have grown by 14 percent since its 2005 pledge to go green.

Stacy Mitchell, a senior research at ILSR and author of the newest report, said “The Waltons claim to have a deep commitment to sustainability, but their support for anti-solar initiatives tells a different story.”

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