If you live in California, there’s a chance that a neighbor with rooftop solar panels will help keep your lights on soon. In a first, the state’s grid operator has approved rules allowing
companies to buy electricity from numerous homes and commercial power
systems, and then bundle it up to meet a threshold needed to sell energy
on the wholesale market.
Companies including utilities will be able to consolidate the output
of rooftop solar systems, batteries and even plug-in electric vehicles,
the California Independent System Operator Corp. said Thursday in a
statement. The shift demonstrates that small-scale power sources are
becoming a more critical part of the state’s energy mix.
“This is an important win for California energy users,” said Ken
Munson, chief executive officer of Sunverge Energy, which aggregates
power from solar panels and batteries installed at homes and businesses.
“It paves the way for consumers to play a more active role in the
generation and distribution of the energy we use every day.”
Spurred by declining costs and leasing programs that offer installation with no upfront customer payments, residential solar
has been the fastest-growing part of the California solar industry. It
increased by 50 percent last year, outpacing utility-scale solar, which
expanded 15 percent, according to Bloomberg New Energy Finance. Some Californians are already helping juice the grid by participating
in utility programs that pay them for power from their solar panels
that they don’t use, a service known as net metering. Those won’t be able to bid in the wholesale markets.
Revenue Opportunity
The move by the grid operator “could ultimately benefit providers of
distributed solar, because it creates the opportunity for an alternative
source of revenue outside of net metering,” said Madeline Yozwiak, an
analyst at Bloomberg New Energy Finance. SolarCity, the biggest residential rooftop solar owner in the state,
sees the Thursday decision as an “important first step toward expanding
access for distributed solar and storage in wholesale markets,”
Jonathan Bass, a company spokesman, said by e-mail. This could lead to additional competition in the wholesale market for
incumbent generators, Paul Patterson, a New York- based analyst for
Glenrock Associates LLC, said in an interview.
Share Price
Shares of SolarCity fell 1.2 percent to $52.15 at the close in New York. Companies that own fossil-fuel power plants in the California market include Calpine Corp., NRG Energy Inc. and Dynegy Inc.
“Historically, residents haven’t been able to participate in
wholesale markets; they have been ring-fenced,” Alan Isemonger, founder
of Energy Market Expertise LLC in Fair Oaks, California, said in a phone
call Thursday. “Now they will have more opportunities to participate.”
He was formerly a manager in market operations at the California ISO.
http://www.renewableenergyworld.com/articles/2015/07/california-approves-distributed-energy-resource-providers-to-aggregate-renewable-energy-generation.html
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