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iSun, Vermont’s publicly traded solar installer, filed for bankruptcy


One of Vermont’s few publicly traded companies, iSun, declared Chapter 11 bankruptcy last week on Monday, June 3. The company hopes to emerge from bankruptcy and continue to do business as one of the Northeast’s largest solar installers, according to Chief Executive Officer Jeffrey Peck.

Peck submitted a 34-page declaration in support of his company’s filing in U.S. Bankruptcy Court in Delaware, in which he described iSun’s dire financial situation. The company is currently losing $250,000 per week, and is forecasting a $10 million loss for 2024. That follows losses of approximately $19.4 million and $53.8 million in 2023 and 2022, respectively.

Brennan Scott, left, and David Strippe of SunCommon install solar panels on a house in Shelburne on Wednesday, August 31, 2016.

As the majority owner and president of Peck Electric Co., the local Vermont company that was iSun’s predecessor, Peck said he “was responsible for the transformation of Peck Electric into one of the largest commercial solar (engineering, procurement and construction) companies in the Northeastern United States.” Peck Electric was founded in 1972 as a traditional electrical contractor, but became one of the leading installers of solar arrays in the state.



Read More: iSun, Vermont’s publicly traded solar installer, filed for bankruptcy

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