Author Archives Laura Arnold

Indiana Gov. Mike Pence Names Sarah Freeman to IURC

Posted by Laura Arnold  /   September 05, 2016  /   Posted in Uncategorized  /   No Comments

Image result for sarah freeman indiana

Indiana Governor Mike Pence (left) named Sarah Freeman to the Indiana Utility Regulatory Commission (IURC).

IndianaDG would like to extend a heartfelt "Congratulations" to Sarah!

Indianapolis – Governor Mike Pence today (9/2/16) named Sarah Freeman as a Commissioner of the Indiana Utility Regulatory Commission (IURC). Freeman will fill the vacancy created by the departure of Commissioner Carolene Mays-Medley, who was recently appointed Executive Director of the White River State Park Development Commission.  Freeman will serve the remainder of Mays-Medley’s term, which expires December 31, 2017.

“Sarah Freeman has dedicated her life to public service and knows firsthand the laws that govern the utilities in our state,” said Governor Pence. “I’m confident her background and subject-matter expertise will serve Sarah well as she continues her work for the people of Indiana as Commissioner of the Indiana Utility Regulatory Commission.”

For more than 15 years, Freeman has worked as a senior staff attorney in the Legislative Services Agency, where she serves as counsel for the House Utilities, Energy, and Telecommunications Committee and the Senate Utilities Committee. In this role, she has drafted or participated in drafting significant utility legislation in recent years. Previously, she has worked as Deputy Attorney General in the Office of the Attorney General, and as a judicial clerk in the Indiana Supreme Court. Freeman was also recently appointed to the National Conference of State Legislatures Task Force on Cybersecurity. Freeman earned her undergraduate degrees at Indiana University in Bloomington and her law degree at Indiana University’s Maurer School of Law.

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Maryland co-op challenges state’s new community solar program at FERC

Posted by Laura Arnold  /   August 30, 2016  /   Posted in solar, Uncategorized  /   No Comments

Maryland co-op challenges state's new community solar program

 By | August 29, 2016

Dive Brief:

  • The Southern Maryland Electric Cooperative (SMECO) has filed a complaint with the Federal Energy Regulatory Commission (FERC) over the state’s community solar program, Politico reports.
  • SMECO claims that the Maryland Public Service Commission (PSC) violated federal law by making utilities buy excess generation from community solar projects at retail rates.
  • The co-op argues the federal Public Utility Regulatory Policies Act (PURPA) limits the size of qualifying power plants to 80 MW and calls for payments at what it would have cost a utility to generate the power if not for the qualifying plant, known as the avoided cost, rather than at retail rates.

Dive Insight:

In June, Maryland regulators approved regulations establishing a three-year community solar pilot program in the state.

Community solar programs have been championed as a way of extending the benefits of solar power beyond well-to-do homeowners by making solar power available to renters and residents of subsidized housing.

In many states, however, developers rely on PURPA to make their projects economically viable. The federal law obliges utilities to buy the output of renewable and small power projects, if they meet the qualifications of the law. Those projects are paid avoided costs as established by individual states. Without the law, developers say, they would not have a market for their projects’ output.

As power prices have fallen in recent years, avoided cost payments have become controversial because in many places they have not been adjusted to match prevailing wholesale power prices.

That has resulted in battles in many states and has prompted FERC to review PURPA’s role in a changing energy market.

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Politico: Florida, Gulf Coast hunker down ahead of storm

Solar Goes Mainstream in the Midwest

Posted by Laura Arnold  /   August 29, 2016  /   Posted in solar  /   No Comments

Solar Goes Mainstream in the Midwest

Indiana is going solar.

That may seem an odd thing to declare say about a state that gets 85 percent of its electricity generation from coal. Indeed, coal may be king, but the king is approaching the end of its reign.

While there are a smattering of solar incentives in Indiana, it’s the market and red-blooded American common sense that is driving the shift to renewable energy. And not just in Indiana.

Across the U.S. Midwest Solar is going mainstream.

Inovateus at Intersolar

I recently had an opportunity to speak with the team from Indiana-based Inovateus Solar at the Intersolar North America conference in San Francisco. I sat down with Nathan Vogel, Director of Strategic Research, and Brand Ambassador Mauricio Anon to discuss the company’s roots, its outlook, and the growth of the clean energy revolution in the United States and globally.

Utilities and many statehouse policymakers may kick and scream, but even in a traditional coal state like Indiana, renewable generation is clearly the path forward.

“For the most part, the utilities really didn’t want to do solar,” says Vogel, “but now they want to control it, they want to do it themselves. You’re seeing a lot of the utilities move to solar for new generation power.”

The arc of Inovateus’ story in many ways reflects the progression clean energy development in the United States: a story of a maturing industry meeting needs of an evolving marketplace.

Solar is no longer a “boutique” industry, and its growing list of customers, ranging from residential consumers to large commercial, government, and utility-scale clients, expect innovative, full-service solutions to their energy demands.

One stop solar shop

Inovateus provides engineering, procurement, construction, and supply for commercial, industrial, and utility-scale solar development projects throughout the Midwest and globally.

Using a “cross-functional, all-inclusive” approach, combined with a network of strategic subcontractor partnerships, Inovateus can shepherd solar development projects from start to finish, and beyond. It’s this comprehensive, integrated model of project development and asset management that is key to the continued growth and mainstreaming of the solar and clean energy industry.

A founder’s vision

“We started as a company called Inovateus Development about 11 years ago,” Vogel says.

“At that time the company was building energy-efficient homes and small commercial. We were also exploring different sources of energy like hydrogen, fuel cells, solar, and wind.”

The company eventually became a distributor of Unisolar, a thin film solar cell product. Unisolar is no longer around, but in 2008 the company split off its solar division and Inovateus Solar was born, expanding into the full-service solar developer it is today.

The pioneering spirit of the company’s early days reflects the vision of its founder, the late Tom Kanczuzewski. An avid outdoorsman, naturalist, entrepreneur, and clean energy advocate, Kanczuzewski recognized how the world was changing and wanted to do something about it.

To date, Inovateus has installed or supplied solar projects in Australia, Chile, Panama, the Caribbean, Fiji, Iceland, Liberia, China, and, of course, the United States.

“When we first started, we traveled to great distances to get projects built,” says current Inovateus president TJ Kanczuzewski (the son of founder Tom Kanczuzewski) in a video interview.

“The last few years we’ve seen things change quite a bit in the Midwest, in our own backyard. We’re able to do a lot of work closer to home.”

With more than 250 megawatts of solar projects built and developed, and more in the pipeline, Inovateus has the “audacious goal” of becoming a “top 5” solar developer by 2023. The driving entrepreneurial spirit and “Midwestern values” instilled by Kanczuzewski forged an enduring company culture of a shared vision and passion for ‘building a brilliant tomorrow”.

“I think those Midwestern values really tie-in well with our company core values,” says TJ Kanczuzewski.

Values encapsulated in the acronym PEACE:

  • Passion
  • Engage
  • Ambition
  • Creativity
  • Esprit de Corps

TJ continues in his father’s footsteps, leading and inspiring a team of talented, dedicated professionals out to change the world.

Image credit: Carl Wycoff, courtesy Flickr

This post first appeared on the author’s LinkedIn page

The post Solar Goes Mainstream in the Midwest appeared first on Global Warming is Real.

Three finalists named for open spot on Indiana Utility Regulatory Commission (IURC)

Posted by Laura Arnold  /   August 20, 2016  /   Posted in Uncategorized  /   No Comments

Three finalists named for open spot on state's powerful utility board

August 19, 2016

A bipartisan committee has recommended three finalists to Gov. Mike Pence to serve on the state’s powerful utility regulatory agency, which approves utility rates for millions of Indiana residents and businesses.

The finalists selected Friday for the Indiana Utility Regulatory Commission are:

— Tim Jeffers, director of business development at CSO Architects and former chief of staff to then-Indiana House Speaker John Gregg.

— Sarah Freeman, senior staff attorney at the Indiana Legislative Services Agency and former Indiana deputy attorney general.

— Jeffrey L. Golc, former vice president at Harrison College, former spokesman for the Hoosier Lottery and former IURC commissioner.

Under law, Pence will select one of the three finalists to fill a vacancy created by the resignation of Commissioner Carolene Mays-Medley. She stepped down in April to accept an appointment as executive director of the White River State Park Development Commission. Her term expires Dec. 31, 2017.

The state is behind schedule in finding a replacement.

The five-member IURC hears hundreds of utility cases a year and regulates $14 billion worth of electric, natural gas, telecommunications, steam, water and sewer utilities. It determines utility rates and charges, environmental compliance plans, financing and bonding—issues that affect millions of ratepayers and dozens of utilities.

The four other members of the commission are Carol Stephan (chair), Jim Huston, Angela Weber and David Ziegner.


For more information about the current IURC members see: http://www.in.gov/iurc/2378.htm 

NIPSCO 3rd IRP Public Advisory Meeting 8/23/16 in Merrillville, IN

Posted by Laura Arnold  /   August 17, 2016  /   Posted in Northern Indiana Public Service Company (NIPSCO), Uncategorized  /   No Comments

NIPSCO's third IRP Public Advisory Meeting is next week!  If you have not done so, please register by following the link below.  In addition, the agenda and draft presentation have been posted.  As a reminder, the subject matter for this meeting is a deeper dive into NIPSCO's existing generation and the optimal replacement options to fill any supply gap.  At this point in time, NIPSCO is still also planning to hold a fourth stakeholder meeting to review the results of the IRP analysis. The date of the fourth meeting is still to be determined, but is expected in mid-September.

Below are the details for NIPSCO's third IRP public advisory meeting:

Date
: Tuesday, August 23, 2016

Time
: 9am - 3:00pm CT (10am - 4:00pm ET)

Location
:
Radisson Hotel at Star Plaza
800 E. 81st Avenue
Merrillville, IN 46410

>>To register, please click here:  www.NIPSCO.com/irp.

Please also feel free to review the materials provided at NIPSCO's first and second public advisory meetings.

If you have any questions, please reply to NIPSCO_IRP@nisource.com.

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