How Extra Space Storage is using solar to make money from its rooftops

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After installing solar panels on the rooftops of more than 850 of its properties to offset its energy costs, Extra Space Storage is trying something new: leasing its rooftops to another company to install solar panels for low-cost energy generation for the local community.

The self-storage giant isn’t involved with the energy produced in these deals; instead, it’s generating revenue from leasing its space in a way that’s not too different from leasing space in its storage units. 

“These are pure lease plays,” Steve Potter, senior manager for solar and sustainability projects at Extra Space Storage, told Facilities Dive.

The company moved into solar power more than a dozen years ago to leverage 30% federal tax credits. These tax credits were renewed in the 2022 Inflation Reduction Act and start winding down in 2033. 

The solar arrays that it’s installed over the years are generating anywhere from 40 to 200 kilowatts of power at each site, all in behind-the-meter programs in which it owns the panels and benefits from the energy that’s generated.

“We might have a multistory building on a site that has the same number of units on three acres that another one, a drive-up building, has on 10 acres, so it varies drastically,” said Potter, who took over the solar program from a predecessor in 2020.

Extra Space Storage
Extra Space Storage

With some 4,200 buildings around the country, the company has room to grow the program before it taps out its portfolio of wholly-owned properties with behind-the-meter solar projects, Potter said. But in anticipation of the tax credits sunsetting in another decade, the company started looking at other ways to leverage its rooftops. That led to talks a few years ago with Solar Landscape, a community solar power provider that last month completed its first project with the company: a pilot in which Solar Landscape leased space on nine of Extra Space’s buildings in New Jersey to sell energy to nearby low- and moderate-income communities.  

“They’re essentially creating a power plant on the roof and supplying energy to the community,” Potter said. “They have several of these in a dense radius on different facilities and they’re producing so much energy that they go out and get subscriptions from consumers and they manage those. So, they're operating essentially as a semi-power company.”

Shared space

With this pilot under its belt, Extra Space has a model for doing more of these, Potter said.