Massachusetts, USA --
Net metering, which enables utilities to reimburse customers for
solar power, is being reconsidered in many parts of the United States.
The quarterly report “The 50 States of Solar,” published by the NC Clean
Energy Technology Center in February, revealed 23 states changed their
net metering policies during Q4 of 2014.
Will these adjustments, driven by requests from investor-owned
utilities and the American Legislative Exchange Council (ALEC), stunt
the growth of the consumer solar industry? “I like the term ‘under fire’ because it really captures the fact
that it’s in the target sights of a lot of utilities,” said John
Farrell, director of democratic energy at the Institute for Local
Self-Reliance. “In a lot of states, they’re launching a tax on net
metering either through the legislature or through the regulatory
commissions, trying to put taxes or fees on the customers that use net
metering, or trying to shift the structure that all those customers use
from volumetric pricing toward net prices.”
These proposals that may limit net metering and virtual net metering
may substantially decrease growth in community solar. Virtual net
metering allows low-income communities to share credits from community
solar projects. “I think community solar laws and virtual net metering are incredibly
important,” Farrell said. “It’s a shame that only 11 states allow it.
Only about 25 percent of Americans own a sunny rooftop that they can put
solar energy on.”
Cost Concerns
Why is net metering being reined in by utilities? There are two
aspects of revenue that concern utilities, Farrell said. Customer
revenue is one aspect, but another involves shareholder returns. A 2014 study by Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory (LBNL), “Financial Impacts of Net-Metered PV on Utilities and Ratepayers: A Scoping Study of Two Prototypical U.S. Utilities,”
showed the rapid growth of customers using net metering could impact
overall return on equity (ROE) for utilities by 5.7 percent to as much
as 20.2 percent if 10 percent of the residential market adopts solar
power.
Impacts on customer costs were much lower. The LBNL report shows that
even if solar adoption expands to 10 percent, customer rates
experienced by two model utilities would only increase by 2.5-2.7
percent.
A 2014 report from ALEC, “Reforming Net Metering: Providing a Bright and Equitable Future,”
raised concerns about unfair cost shifting among residential customers
in which those who do not own solar would pay higher costs while those
who did own solar saved money. ALEC said it considers this to be a
social equity issue. ALEC has since produced a legislative resolution to propose adjusting fees so that solar customers pay higher costs toward grid maintenance and other expenses.
Edison Electric Institute, which has advised utilities to encourage customers to be concerned about net metering, did not respond to a request for comment.
Are the adjusted fees that ALEC supports really justifiable?
According to some in the solar industry and environmental community,
they may not be. “There is an argument we’ve seen that net metering shifts the costs
onto other customers,” said Sean Gallagher, vice president for state
affairs at Solar Energy Industries Association. “You really need to do a
proper analysis to determine whether that’s correct. It’s insufficient
to simply assume that because a customer’s bill is shifted, that bill is
shifted to another customer.”
Cost-Benefit Tradeoffs
The core difficulty appears to be a problem with how utilities value solar. “In states like Minnesota, where the politics are a bit more
progressive, we get a value-of-solar law,” Farrell said. “The value of
solar in Minnesota is higher than the net metering price.”
There are many factors that, if taken into account, might show that
net metering benefits utilities substantially. According to Gallagher,
these factors include avoided energy costs, avoided capacity costs,
avoided distribution and transmission upgrade costs, avoided line
losses, quantified suppression of market prices, and avoided costs of
pollutants — SOx, NOx and carbon.
According to “A Review of Solar PV Benefit and Cost Studies,”
a report published by Rocky Mountain Institute in 2013, states are
having difficulty valuing how solar benefits distribution, changes the
cost of grid support services, benefits grid security, creates social
benefits, and reduces the environmental impacts of energy production.
The NC Clean Energy Technology Center report quoted the Regulatory
Assistance Project as saying that potential cross-subsidies could flow
either from distributed generation customers to non-participating
customers or the other way around.
At the end of 2014, the NC Clean Energy Technology Center report
said, “Net metering policy in the largest distributed solar markets was
characterized by near-term expansions of net metering policies balanced
by investigating future, more substantial changes to net metering
policies. States are varying in their approach to cost-benefit analyses,
considering the value that solar provides to utilities, and adjusting
utility financial incentives and benefits to account for the benefits of
solar.”
In Q4 of 2014, the report said, “There was action on five utility
proposals to enact charges specific to net metering customers. PNM
Resources in New Mexico and Salt River Project in Arizona both proposed
substantial new demand charges on net-metered customers. Black Hills
Energy in South Dakota withdrew a proposal that would have required new
net-metered customers to go on a special tariff that included a demand
charge. Conversely, if South Carolina’s net metering settlement is
approved, utilities will not be permitted to propose specific customer
charges until 2025.” According to Smart Grid Today and The Washington Post, Salt River
Project’s net metering charge has been enacted and is now in place.
There has also been substantial action in Hawaii, where solar power’s
market popularity and competitiveness are considerable. According to
the NC Clean Energy Technology Center report, a January proposal to
increase the circuit threshold for solar, proposed by Hawaiian Electric,
would have ended net metering, reducing credits for solar electricity
from the retail rate ($0.295-$0.359/kWh) to a much-reduced tariff
($0.147-$0.223/kWh).
Proactive Solutions
Some states are thinking proactively about how to address these
financial challenges for utilities. California, New York, Minnesota,
Massachusetts and Hawaii are considering restructuring utility
regulation to better accommodate solar, the NC Clean Energy Technology
Center report said.
According to Farrell, utilities should look forward, not try to retain their 20th
century business models. “Solar and distributed renewables are simply
what’s going to make sense for the grid. We’re going to move toward a
grid where there’s no monopoly for that distribution system. They’re
going to be providing a platform where all sorts of people can transact.
The technology we have these days is pushing us in that direction.
Utilities are going to want policies that encourage private entities to
generate energy and supply it to the grid system.”
However, Farrell said, the road to a utility business model that
includes solar is unclear. “I don’t think many [utilities] see what it
will look like,” Farrell said. “They’re really scared. The only thing we
can think of doing now is to fight back and protect the way it has
been.”
Utility Dive surveyed electric company executives and published the results in January. “Executives responded that they know there is a future in distributed
generation but they do not have a business plan for it,” Farrell said. “There’s a lot of cultural inertia,” Farrell said. “It has mostly
been a delaying action. I think [utilities are] just trying to buy time.
Utilities do understand that the nature of the electricity system is
changing.”
http://www.renewableenergyworld.com/rea/news/article/2015/04/questionable-cost-concerns-slow-net-metering
No comments:
Post a Comment