There aren’t many solar success stories from the Southeast, making
Raleigh, NC, stand out in a region with low-cost electricity and modest
sunshine. With just over 2 megawatts of solar on public
property — providing close to 7% of municipal building peak
demand — Raleigh’s solar success comes despite state rules preventing
city from buying electricity from any non-utility entity.
In April 2015, I talked to Robert Hinson, renewable energy
coordinator with the City of Raleigh, NC. In lieu of third-party power
purchase agreements, Raleigh has pursued solar in three ways: by leasing
space on public property to solar developers; owning solar and selling
power to Duke Energy; and net metering a city-owned solar array.
A Twist on a Traditional Lease
The lease arrangement for Raleigh is a bit different than used
elsewhere. Instead of the city leasing the solar array from a third
party, the city leases the land for the solar array, and the solar
developer sells power directly to the utility. The city’s economic
benefit is from the lease payments.
Hinson says that the lease agreements allow the city the option to
purchase the solar project at a reduced price after seven years, in
which time the solar developer will have realized tax credits and
depreciation. The city would assume the power purchase agreements and
continue selling electricity to Duke Energy. The purchase price is
favorable, as the contracts were signed in the early stages of Duke’s
solar program.
However, Hinson says the city doesn’t yet know the purchase price and
so it’s unclear how profitable it would be to buy the solar arrays on
leased property. The city has also purchased solar arrays to offset on-site energy
use, using power purchase agreements or net metering. The city’s first
foray into solar was a 53 kW solar array on its operations facility in
2009 to see “what were the issues” with going solar. In this case, the
city sold the power to the utility via a power purchase agreement.
Another solar installation used net metering, but Hinson notes that net metering only works for relatively small systems. North Carolina’s net metering law
only protects projects 100 kilowatts and smaller from utility standby
charges. The city’s 75 kW array on its solid waste facility falls into
that safe harbor. The project wasn’t necessarily done for the economics,
but in part because the city wanted to achieve a LEED Platinum rating.
Expansion plans for solar on Raleigh municipal property will likely
focus on small, net metered systems. The upside is better economics, but
it also requires buildings with fairly significant on-site energy
consumption. City staff will look carefully at “what the return on
investment is.”
They have one interesting concept for expanding solar at their
wastewater treatment facility. In addition to a ground-mounted array,
they are considering floating solar panels on the treatment reservoirs.
This “float-o-voltaic” system could produce electricity and, by blocking
sunlight from the water, reduce algae growth.
Solar growth for the city has since slowed. When the North Carolina
renewable portfolio standard was approved in 2007, the utilities
(Progress and Duke Energy, before the latter took over the former) paid
favorable rates to distributed solar generators. These incentives had
investment groups and developers coming to Raleigh to site solar on
city-owned land and rooftops. As “economy-of-scale” has taken over, the
investment community has taken their dollars to larger solar
installations and not municipal projects, says Hinson.
Overcoming Barriers
What barriers are there for city solar investment? Hinson says the
biggest thing is the upfront cost and a failure to consider the return
on investment. “Each one of these projects is going to have a pay back,” Hinson
says. Instead of looking at solar as a “frivolous amenity, look at it as
being an investment long term.” The city’s second highest cost is
energy, right behind personnel. Over decades of low-cost operation, the
city’s solar arrays can pay for themselves two or three times over.
Hinson hopes the Energy Freedom Act, allowing power purchase
agreements, will pass the state legislature and remove this barrier. It
means the city would not have to make an upfront investment for the
solar, but could just purchase the power from a non-utility solar
developer. The federal and state tax credits for solar also make a
substantial difference.
Down the road, Hinson says, the economic argument for solar may be
improved if the city (or utilities) include more socioeconomic and
environmental benefits in their analyses. Raleigh is like many U.S. cities that face substantial policy
barriers to solar at the state level, but have found innovative local
solutions to overcome them. However, it may have reached the limit of
its opportunity without lifting some of those barriers.
To learn more about solar efforts in Raleigh and other cities, read our Public Rooftop Revolution report, highlighting the remarkable opportunity for solar on municipal rooftops.
This is the 24th edition of Local Energy Rules,
an ILSR podcast with Director of Democratic Energy John Farrell
that shares powerful stories of successful local renewable energy and
exposes the policy and practical barriers to its expansion. Other than
his immediate family, the audience is primarily researchers, grassroots
organizers, and grasstops policy wonks who want vivid examples of how
local renewable energy can power local economies.
http://cleantechnica.com/2015/11/18/duking-municipal-solar-raleigh-episode-24-local-energy-rules/
No comments:
Post a Comment