New Jersey Governor Chris Christie, whose administration has called
solar power an economic "albatross," is expected to sign legislation
that would increase the amount of solar energy state utilities must buy.
The New Jersey State Assembly approved a bill
Monday that requires utilities to obtain 2.05 percent of their power
from solar projects in 2014, up from less than half of one percent of
the state’s power now. The vote was 68-4, with five abstentions,
approving the same bill that passed in the state Senate on May 31.
The state became the biggest U.S. solar market
in the first quarter, surpassing California, and the legislation may
extend that lead. New Jersey solar plants earn renewable-energy credits
that utilities buy, and surging installation growth led to an oversupply
that threatened to stall new development, said Representative Upendra
Chivukula, who wrote the bill.
“This will absorb the excess credits, bring up
the price and attract new investment,” Chivukula, the Democrat chairman
of the Assembly’s telecommunications and utilities committee, said in an
interview after it was passed late yesterday. “It’s about saving the
jobs we’ve created in this industry.”
Under the state’s current renewable-energy
standard, utilities must obtain 20.4 percent of all their power from
renewable sources by mid-2021, with 2,518 gigawatt-hours of that coming
from solar.
The legislation changes the solar requirement to
a percentage from the flat figure, accelerating the amount utilities
must get in the near-term. That will also increase the number of solar
renewable-energy credits they must buy.
Credit Prices
Prices for the credits sank to less than $100 a
megawatt-hour this quarter from more than $500 a year ago because the
amount of credits available is more than double what utilities need to
meet the current requirement, according to Flett Exchange LLC, an
environmental broker.
“At $100 per megawatt-hour it’s almost impossible to finance a project,” said Guarav Naik, a principal at developer GeoGenix LLC in Old Bridge, New Jersey. “This should stabilize the market in a sustainable way.”
The state’s solar requirement will increase to
4.1 percent by 2028. The penalty for failing to meet the increasing
percentage will be $339 for each megawatt-hour short of the goal in
2014, declining annually to $239 a megawatt-hour in 2028.
Michael Drewniak, a spokesman for Governor
Christie, didn’t immediately respond to a phone message or e-mail
seeking comment Tuesday.
“We’re pretty confident the governor will sign
it,” Jeff Tittel, director of the Sierra Club in New Jersey, said in an
interview. “The legislature has been working with Christie’s team to
ensure his support.”
‘Financial Albatross’
New Jersey developers added 174 megawatts of
photovoltaic panels in the first quarter, surpassing California as the
largest solar state with 34 percent of all U.S. installations, according
to the Solar Energy Industries Association.
New Jersey’s draft 2011 Energy Master Plan
referred to an incentive program for solar energy as a “financial
albatross.” The phrase was removed in the final version, which cut the
state’s renewable-energy goal to 22.5 percent of all power sources from
30 percent by 2021.
Copyright 2012 Bloomberg
http://www.renewableenergyworld.com/rea/news/article/2012/06/christie-expected-to-sign-bill-to-boost-solar-in-n-j
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