New York, NY --
SolarCity Corp., the largest U.S. solar-power provider by market
value, will resume applications to connect energy-storage systems in
California after regulators said they’re exempt from utility fees.
Utilities are barred from imposing charges including connection
fees of as much as $800, the California Public Utility Commission said
in a proposed decision yesterday. The commission typically adopts these
proposed decisions and a final ruling may come as early as May 15.
SolarCity in March stopped applying to install and
connect storage systems for hundreds of customers in the state because
utilities were requiring a series of applications and fees that made the
process onerous. Combining rooftop solar panels with batteries to
retain the energy for later use makes people less dependent on local
power companies, a potential threat to the utility monopoly.
“When we first started it wasn’t clear to us that
these fees would be charged,” Peter Rive, chief commercial officer of
San Mateo, California-based SolarCity, said in an interview. “We’re
happy with the decision.”
Sempra Energy’s San Diego Gas & Electric Co.
opposes the exemptions for storage in comments to the commission, saying
in comments to the commission that the technology will shift some costs
to customers without such systems. PG&E Corp.’s Pacific Gas &
Electric Co. wants the exemptions only for residential customers and
only for a trial period.
Grid Tool
Battery-storage systems at customer
sites with solar panels should be welcomed by utilities as an additional
tool to manage the grid and reduce costs for all consumers, Rive said.
If hundreds of such systems were connected to the grid, a utility could
tap the stored energy during periods of peak demand instead of building a
new natural gas plant.
“There are massive benefits to including this storage
on the grid,” Rive said. “There’s a misconception that we want to remove
people from the grid. There’s a positive network benefit from storage.” Storage will be an important part of the power grid as
the utility industry evolves to take better advantage of renewable
energy, Rive said in a blog post today. SolarCity introduced a program to lease batteries to
solar customers in California and New England last year through 10- year
contracts that have no upfront costs. The company says customers will
typically save more on demand charges than they will pay each month for
the systems.
http://www.renewableenergyworld.com/rea/news/article/2014/04/solarcity-resumes-storage-applications-after-california-decision
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