What is the difference between LEDs and residential solar
panels? Plenty, clearly, but for a utility executive worried about slow
or no load growth they amount to exactly the same thing—trouble.
I have written extensively about the broad utility-led campaign to quash state net metering programs (see these posts here and here).
In general, this effort is based on the premise that net metering
unfairly benefits residential solar users (by overpaying them for their
generation) and shifts costs onto non-solar customers (by forcing
companies to charge them for the fixed costs no longer being paid for by
the solar customers through their electricity purchases). But that
premise is also true of LEDs if you think it through.
This week I
decided to replace a bank of six aging incandescent lightbulbs in my
home’s master bathroom with new LEDs—something homeowners are doing with
increasing frequency around the country. In years past, this would have
been a non-event, but with LEDs’ vastly improved efficiency and lengthy
lifespan the equation has changed significantly.
I did a little
back of the envelope calculating about the switch: The six bulbs I
pulled out consumed 260 watts of electricity when turned on (for reasons
unclear to me I had five 40W bulbs and one 60W bulb installed in the
bathroom), the new ones just 66W total (and they are brighter to boot,
but that is another story). So, every time I turn on the bathroom light
switch I am saving 194 watts. That’s an admittedly small amount of
power, but if you figure the lights are on for three hours daily that
adds up to 582 watt-hours per day. That’s still not much, but over the
course of a month, these six lights could save me on the order of 17.5
kilowatt-hours (30×582=17,460 watt-hours or 17.46 kwh).
While
that may not sound like a lot, my total consumption last month (my bill
was dated June 25 before the summer heat settled in and the AC started
running non-stop) amounted to 874 kwh. In other words, those six
inefficient incandescent may have accounted for as much as 2 percent of
my overall consumption. But no more, that consumption is gone, and given
the new lights 20 year expected lifespan, effectively never to return.
And
even if you take a longer view of my home’s consumption—say the past
six months, or all of 2014 (which I did, and found a surprisingly
consistent monthly average of 1080 kwh for both periods)—those six
lights still accounted for more than 1.5 percent of my electric
consumption.
Monetarily, it’s a tiny loss for Dominion (my local
utility) given that my rates range from 3.795 cents per kwh for the
first 800 kwh I consume to a maximum of 5.773 cents per kwh during the
peak summer season (with conversely lower rates above 800 kwh of
consumption during the winter months), and a correspondingly small
monthly benefit for me. But here’s the rub, and it’s exactly the same
criticism leveled by the utility industry against net metered
residential solar customers: I am now no longer buying those 17.5 kwh a
month—and the small amount of fixed system charges that I had previously
been paying for through that consumption I am now essentially shifting
to other users.
If I was the only customer installing LEDs, this
wouldn’t be an issue, but when thousands of consumers do exactly the
same thing it adds up. The problem for Dominion and other utilities is
that thousands of consumers are doing exactly what I just did, and many
thousands (if not millions) are expected to do the same thing in the
years to come. For example, a DOE report issued last year (which can be
found here)
estimated that upward of one-third of all residential lighting sales
would be LEDs by 2020, up from less than 1 percent in 2013.
Clearly,
new rate structures that don’t rely on recovering fixed system charges
through monthly sales are needed because criticizing ratepayers (oh,
that’s right, utilities like to call us customers now) for investing
their own funds to cut their electricity consumption is a losing
proposition for the utility industry. Now it’s time to figure out
which of my remaining old-school lightbulbs to replace next—before
Dominion tries to make me pay for not covering my “fair” share of the
utility’s fixed costs.
http://www.theenergycollective.com/djwamsted/2252474/leds-pose-same-threat-solar-net-metering-utility-ratemaking
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