Environment

Celebrate EVs and solar this weekend at Drive Electric Month and Sun Day events

Celebrate EVs and solar this weekend at Drive Electric Month and Sun Day events

Drive Electric Month continues this week, with nearly 200 online and in-person events celebrating electric vehicles. Events will be held for the next several weekends all across the US, plus a few in Canada and one in Guadalajara, Mexico.

In addition, Sun Day, a new celebration championed by Bill McKibben, occurs this Sunday, September 21, with events across the world celebrating advancements in solar power and electrification.

Drive Electric Month is an annual event organized by Plug In America, the Electric Vehicle AssociationEVHybridNoireDrive Electric USA, and the Sierra Club. This is the event’s 15th year. It started in the US as National Drive Electric Week, but for the last few years, some events have been hosted in other countries as well, and now the event has expanded to cover most of the month of September, with a few events in October as well.

These events are an opportunity for prospective EV buyers to talk directly with EV owners about the experience of owning an electric car, and EV owners to network with each other and share tips. The dealership experience is not ideal for many EV shoppers, so unfiltered conversations with EV owners can be a great way to learn.

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Each event is organized by local EV advocates, and they range in size from small parking lot meetups and local EV parades to large festivals with lots of booths from nearby car dealers and green businesses. Many events have live music, family-friendly activities, food trucks and the like.

A map showing 2025’s events

Drive Electric Month has a map and list of events happening over the course of the month. Most events are in-person, but there are some webinar-style online events that you can attend to hear about various topics related to electric vehicles if you can’t get to any local evels. You can also search for events near you.

Be sure to click through to each individual event’s page to see what your local events will look like, what types of EVs might be in attendance, and register your interest.

A number of fun events have already occurred, but the celebration continues for the rest of the month and through the first couple weekends of October with even more fun to be had.

DIY conversions are one of the more fun things to see at these events. Image from OEVA/Plug In America

Here’s a sample of some of the events still to happen over the next few weeks:

  • Mesa EV Ride & Drive in Mesa, Arizona on September 20, 8am-12pm: A veteran group of organizers is bringing the EV experience to Mesa Community College. People can test drive a variety of models, talk to real owners and learn how and where to charge. 
  • Jimmy Buffett Son of a Sailor Festival in Mobile, Alabama on September 20, 2pm-7pm: There will be EV displays at this festival which celebrates Jimmy Buffett and Gulf Coast culture. The free festival features live music, local restaurants, parrot-head costume contests and EV drivers who can answer all your questions about driving electric. 
  • Electric Avenue at the Downtown Car Show in Grand Junction, Colorado on September 20, 9am-3pm: At the 23rd annual downtown car show, EVs will have their own block. Spectators will visit with drivers and can participate in a friendly competition for great prizes. 
Knoxville’s event is one of the largest, with 75 cars registered so far. Image from Tennessee Clean Fuels
  • Knoxville Drive Electric Festival in Knoxville, Tennessee on September 27, 10am-3pm: This event bills itself as the largest NDEM event in the Southeast. Along with EV displays and ride-and-drive, the live music stage will be powered by a Ford F-150 Lightning using its vehicle-to-load capabilities.
  • Plug In America Ride and Drive at Space Coast Pride Parade & Festival in Melbourne, Florida on September 27, 12pm-4pm: Plug In America itself is hosting a ride-and-drive at the Space Coast Pride Parade & Festival. The public can test drive EVs from different manufacturers, engage with local EV owners and ask questions of the organization’s EV experts.
  • He Ala Pono EV and Sustainability Fair in Hilo, Hawaii on September 27, 10am-2pm: This general sustainability fair will showcase organizations focused clean transportation and energy, food security, community resilience and green infrastructure, and will include an EV show with test rides and drives. As for other Hawaii events, Maui still has one upcoming in Kahului on Oct11. Kauai and O’ahu already hosted events earlier in the month.
2023 NDEW Waterloo Ontario. Photo: Ian Darwin
  • National Drive Electric Month Waterloo 2025 in Waterloo, Ontario on October 4 from 11am-3pm: This will once again be the largest event in Canada. There are a few other Canadian events scheduled (all at different times), in Saskatoon (Sep21), Toronto (Sep27), and Regina (Sep27). Winnipeg and Courtenay also held their own events earlier in the month.
  • ELECTRATON DEM’25 in Guadalajara on October 4 from 9am-5pm: This is once again the sole event in Mexico, hosted at Oscar Casillas Karting Track, where there will also be a 4th annual race of student-built electric karts alongside the EV exhibition and test drives. (Here are some photos from last year’s event, including the student kart races and a Cybertruck on track).

Not all the events are large or hosted in big cities. There are also smaller events happening in town centers, church parking lots, and so on, often with just a handful of EV owners who are typically happy to stand around and have a frank discussion with members of the public about what it’s like to own an EV, or to network with other local EV owners.

Events aren’t just in big cities. Here’s one in rural Shenandoah Junction, WV. Photo: Robert Fernatt, West Virginia Electric Auto Association

If you’d like to attend any of these Drive Electric Week events, either to show your vehicle, to volunteer to help run the event, or just to show up and look around, you can check out the list of events, then go to each event’s page to find more information. Remember to click the “RSVP” or “Volunteer” links near the top to register your interest (or register at the links mentioned in the event description).

Sun Day is a new celebration of solar power on September 21

Appropriately enough, this Sunday is also… Sun Day, a new celebration and day of action calling for a sun-powered planet. Solar is now the cheapest form of energy available on the planet, and the world has access to more than enough of it to power all of our electricity needs (and even more, to power things that are currently not electrified, but should be, like home heating and cooling, cooking, and of course, transportation).

The event is being championed by author and environmental advocate Bill McKibben, who recently wrote about the sharp rise in solar power across the world in an article and book, arguing that the world is currently seeing a moment where improvements in solar technology are giving us a last chance to confront the climate crisis that humans have spent the last century causing, and a fresh chance to reshape civilization around more equitable availability of energy for all people on the planet.

Sun Day also has nearly 300 events registered, most of which occur on September 21st, the eponymous day. Though there are a few scattered around in upcoming (or past) weeks listed on Sun Day’s website events list.

A map of Sun Day events across the globe

September 21st is notable for two reasons: one, it’s the autumnal equinox, and two, it’s one day before the UN’s annual general meeting. One intent of the event is to show support for solar power to the world’s governments.

The events are global, with some in Europe, Canada, and Australia (the dot in Africa on the map is an online event). Though most events are in the US, a country where the current squatter in the White House (who is Constitutionally barred from holding office in the US) is currently attacking this form of cheap and clean energy, despite an affordability crisis that solar could help solve.

The US has ample solar resources, with more than enough sun to power the entire country and lower electricity bills for all, but the ignorant convicted felon pretending to be president is currently putting up roadblocks in front of the cheapest form of energy and instead giving even more benefits to the costliest and deadliest forms of energy, in service of fossil fuel companies that gave hundreds of millions of dollars in bribes in exchange for this preferential treatment. In the face of these republican attacks on affordability and clean air, it’s time for individuals to take action to repower their own homes and communities.

Some Sun Day events will take the form of rallies or teach-ins calling for more action on installing solar power, but most events will be more along the lines of of family-friendly sustainability fairs, bike rides, sustainable home tours, and so on to showcase home electrification and electric transportation, informing attendees how they can improve their lives through solar and electrification.

So, there’s a lot of crossover between Sun Day and Drive Electric events, with some events covering both topics at the same time.

For example, one notable Drive Electric/Sun Day event will be in Whittier, CA on Sep. 20th (not the 21st) from 11am-3pm, with test drives, an electrified home tour, and an eco scavenger hunt. It’s being organized by one of the original founders of National Drive Electric Week, so expect to see some EV oldtimers at this one.

To find out more about Sun Day, head on over to its website at sunday.earth, where there is an events list, a selection of recent notable solar news (with a featured story from Electrek’s Michelle Lewis), and a way to participate from home by drawing your own sun logo, which Sun Day is collecting a global gallery of.


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