“What I’m worried about is the end of the ITC,” said Tony Clifford,
CEO of Standard Solar a solar developer based in Maryland during an
interview at Intersolar North America. In preparation for a presentation
that he was giving at the show, Clifford sought out studies other than
those conducted by the Solar Energy Industries Association (SEIA) about
what will happen to solar in the U.S. should the ITC go away.
He wanted
to look beyond SEIA, the lobbying arm of the industry, because Clifford
said he would expect SEIA to say the end of the ITC will be catastrophic
for the solar industry, it is a lobbying organization after all. While
he does believe the industry will be harmed he wanted to see what other
independent studies were showing.
The other studies really opened his eyes. “The Energy Information
Agency of DOE basically said 0 percent of utility-scale [solar will be
built] after the ITC and a lot of people say that,” he said. “And a huge
drop in distributed generation, basically off a cliff.” Clifford
pointed out that Stanford Business School came out with a report in April, saying that solar would fall “basically off a cliff.”
Further, he said that the solar institute of George Washington
University also has a report showing the solar industry “going off a
cliff,” he said. “I think a lot of people in the industry are whistling past the
graveyard,” he said, “because they are not really focusing on it.”
Indeed Renewable Energy World magazine asked solar industry stakeholders the same question
for last month’s digital edition, called the “Solar Issue” and found
that there is a belief that solar industry costs have fallen enough that
the industry will withstand the ITC drop. Clifford disagrees. “Take a
look at the Southeast,” he said, “where you can barely make the numbers
work now with a 30 percent ITC — that market goes away,” he said. “You
look at the Midwest, the upper Midwest like Minnesota, where they are
starting to do some things and Illinois, same deal. You can make some
deals pencil now but without the ITC that market’s gone away.”
Clifford said the Stanford Study, which analyzed the utility,
commercial and residential markets in California, Colorado, Texas, North
Carolina and New Jersey, particularly alarmed him. “Their assessment is
that the only thing that will work after 2016 is commercial in
California. Beyond that, they say that solar is distinctly uncompetitive
on a levelized cost of energy basis.”
A Winnable Fight
But what can the solar industry do about it? Start fighting, said
Clifford. And one way of fighting is by contributing to the political
action committee, otherwise known as the SolarPAC. Clifford took a look
at how much money was in the SolarPAC, the fund used by lobbyists to get
in front of Congress and argue their points, and divided that number by
174,000 solar workers. He determined that there was about $0.46 per
worker.
“Compare that to whatever the budget of the Koch brothers is or any
of the fossil fuel industry lobbyists,” he said. “We should all take
out some personal unemployment insurance by putting 150 bucks this year
and 150 bucks next year into PAC and that would give us a war chest of
50 million dollars.”
Clifford thinks the fight is winnable because “solar has popular
support,” he said. “For decades it has been 70-90 percent but that’s
‘soft support’ and in DC ‘soft support’ is support not backed by money.” “We are a real industry now, granted an adolescent industry, but we have to step up as individuals,” he said.
http://www.renewableenergyworld.com/articles/2015/07/think-the-us-solar-industry-doesn-t-need-the-solar-itc-think-again.html
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