Before trusting John Berger with your…
Before trusting John Berger with your home energy system, I’d encourage you to look into what happened at his last company.
I was a Sunnova Energy PPA customer. I’m a 100% permanently disabled Navy veteran. Over the course of more than a year, I made multiple documented requests to enroll in Sunnova’s AutoPay system. Each time, their representatives failed to properly set it up. Because I believed autopay was active, I had no idea payments weren’t being drafted. By the time I found out, seven late payment marks had been reported to the credit bureaus.
When I discovered the problem, I paid every balance immediately and began escalating. Sunnova opened four separate cases (Case-16606048, Case-17505293, Case-17791694, and Case-17801130). Their own Issue Resolution Specialist acknowledged in writing that their records showed I had requested autopay. Another representative opened a goodwill letter case and explicitly acknowledged “the damage done to your credit score.” The complaint was escalated to their executive team. A Senior Issue Resolution Specialist was assigned. None of them fixed it. Not one.
The damage was real. My Navy Federal Credit Union refinance application was denied specifically because of the credit score damage caused by Sunnova’s reporting errors. That denial cost me financially in ways I’m still dealing with today.
In my experience, Sunnova’s business model was predatory. Long-term contracts that follow the property, billing systems that conveniently malfunction, and a resolution process designed to exhaust you into silence. I believe elderly homeowners and military families are particularly vulnerable to this kind of arrangement because the contracts are complex, the PPA obligations transfer with the home, and the customer service infrastructure is built to deflect rather than resolve.
John Berger resigned as Sunnova’s CEO in March 2025. Three months later, Sunnova filed Chapter 11 bankruptcy with $8.9 billion in debt, laying off over half its workforce. The company’s assets were sold off. Berger then immediately launched Otovo USA — a company that, by his own description, targets the very customers his old company abandoned.








