The Power We Build Together: Community + GeoZone
Energy transitions are often talked about in terms of infrastructure, new technologies, and ambitious climate goals. But for the people living in the neighborhoods where these changes happen, the transition feels much more personal. It shows up in monthly energy bills, comfort at home, job opportunities, and the chance to have a voice in decisions that shape their future. Meaningful community engagement is not optional; it is essential to making energy transitions successful.
In Sonoma and Mendocino counties, this transition is taking shape through the GeoZone, an initiative led by Sonoma Clean Power (SCP) to develop up to 600 MW of geothermal energy. As a community-owned, not-for-profit power provider governed by a board of local elected officials, SCP answers directly to the people it serves. That accountability fundamentally shapes how the agency approaches engagement. The goal is not simply to secure permits, but to ensure projects reflect community priorities and help residents understand why energy choices matter. For example, regional outreach has helped build understanding of why solar alone cannot provide around-the-clock reliability, and why geothermal plays a critical role in a resilient clean energy system.
Geothermal development offers long-term benefits for the region, including reliable clean power, local workforce opportunities, new tax revenue, and protection against rising energy costs. Keeping those benefits local is a core reason why SCP has entered the geothermal space. Achieving that outcome requires early and ongoing public involvement so communities can help guide how projects evolve. For many customers, engagement also starts with understanding who Sonoma Clean Power is and why its name appears on their electricity bill.
Public presentations and town halls have created space for transparency and dialogue with residents, local leaders, partners, and industry experts. Events in Santa Rosa, the largest city in SCP’s service area, and Cloverdale, near the GeoZone’s original interest area, drew strong participation and surfaced a range of perspectives and questions, from construction impacts to seismic monitoring. Beyond large public forums, SCP continues smaller, focused conversations with local organizations and community leaders, where consistent priorities have emerged: affordability, local jobs, and long-term reliability.
Community input has also helped shape SCP’s policy advocacy for responsible geothermal development. Two SCP-sponsored bills, AB 1359 and AB 531, have been signed into law, supporting more efficient and cost-effective development of new geothermal resources. Ongoing efforts focus on improving permitting, strengthening transmission planning, and lowering costs for customers. At the same time, SCP is working with technology developers, local agencies, and research partners to advance geothermal solutions that align technical innovation with community needs.
As the GeoZone advances, it highlights a broader lesson for energy transitions everywhere: progress depends not only on technology, but also on trust, accountability, and collaboration. By grounding innovation in community priorities, policy alignment, and strong partnerships, Sonoma Clean Power aims to demonstrate how local solutions can build a more reliable, affordable, and resilient energy future.