Temple Emanuel’s solar panel array is now fully installed and operational!
We announced a project in 2025 to address a critical need for Temple — replacing our aging, actively-leaking roof — while actualizing our Vision & Mission of Living, Learning, and Leading Judaism. Our 368 solar panels will:
- Generate 217.12 kWh of electricity — the equivalent of 22 average family homes — in its first year of operation;
- Offset 80+% of Temple’s annual energy consumption;
- Save Temple $1.3 million dollars over the 30-year warrantied lifetime of the panels.
The solar panels safeguard our sacred space while helping us demonstrate our commitment to the Jewish values of:
- Bal Tashchit – Conservation of Resources: The mitzvah of not destroying nature and natural resources. In Sefer HaMitzvot, Maimonides says: “And not only trees, but whoever breaks vessels, tears clothing, wrecks that which has been built up, or wastes food in a destructive manner transgresses the commandment of Bal Tashchit.”
- Tikkun Olam – Repairing the World: To mend, repair, and transform our world through acts of justice is a uniquely human endeavor and our responsibility as a Jewish community. In the 1999 Pittsburgh Platform, Reform Judaism affirmed: “We bring Torah into the world when we strive to fulfill the highest ethical mandates in our relationships with others and with all of God’s creation.”
- L’Avdah Ul’Shomra – Earth is Ours to Safeguard: “When the Holy One, blessed be God, created Adam the first man, God took him and showed him all the trees in the Garden of Eden. God said to him: ‘See My creations, how beautiful and exemplary they are. Everything I created, I created for you. Make certain that you do not ruin and destroy My world, for there will be no one to mend it after you.’” Ecclesiastes Rabbah 7:13
Your financial support will keep Temple Emanuel sustainable and resilient for years to come!
Click here to make a contribution.
Learn more by clicking on links below or by scheduling a conversation with Rabbi Aaron Meyer or Finance Director Rebecca Closson.
A Brighter Future for Temple Emanuel