Author Archives Laura Arnold

‘Straight uphill’: Power sector reforms face tough path in gridlocked Illinois legislature

Posted by Laura Arnold  /   April 12, 2016  /   Posted in solar, wind  /   No Comments

'Straight uphill': Power sector reforms face tough path in gridlocked Illinois legislature

Three utility-backed bills that failed to pass last could be rolled into a single package

Press event 4/13/16 regarding energy security and resiliency initiatives at Crane

Posted by Laura Arnold  /   April 12, 2016  /   Posted in Uncategorized  /   No Comments
state seal

OFFICE OF THE LT. GOVERNOR
STATE HOUSE
INDIANAPOLIS, INDIANA 46204-2797

Eric J. Holcomb

LT. GOVERNOR

For Immediate Release  

MEDIA ALERT

April 12, 2016

Lt. Governor Holcomb to Welcome Assistant Secretary of the Navy to Indiana Statehouse and Host Press Event about Energy Security Initiative
Will also be joined by Naval Support Activity Crane and Duke Energy officials

WHAT:

  • Lt. Governor Eric Holcomb will host senior leaders from the Department of the Navy (DON), Naval Support Activity Crane, Duke Energy and other state officials for a press event regarding energy security and resiliency initiatives at Crane located in Southwest Central Indiana.

WHO:

  • The Honorable Dennis McGinn, assistant secretary of the Navy for Energy, Installations and Environment
  • Lt. Governor Eric Holcomb
  • Cmdr. Timothy Craddock, commanding officer, Naval Support Activity Crane
  • Melody Birmingham-Byrd, State President Indiana, Duke Energy
  • Duane Embree, Director, Indiana Office of Defense Development

WHEN:

  • Wednesday, April 13, 2016 @ 11:00 a.m. EDT

WHERE:

  • Indiana Statehouse (200 West Washington St, Indianapolis 46204)
  • 3rd floor South Atrium

*Media will have an opportunity to speak with senior leaders following the event.

*The press conference will be live streamed here or at https://indiana.adobeconnect.com/events/.


Media Contact:
Dennis Rosebrough
Communications Director
Office of Lt. Governor Eric Holcomb
drosebrough@lg.in.gov
desk: (317) 234-45258


The Lieutenant Governor statutorily serves as the President of the Indiana Senate and chairs the Indiana Counter Terrorism and Security Council. Additionally, he manages the following agencies of State government:

FoB2016

UtilityDive: Mass lawmakers pass bill to raise solar cap, cut net metering rates

Posted by Laura Arnold  /   April 10, 2016  /   Posted in Uncategorized  /   No Comments

 MASS State House

Massachusetts lawmakers pass bill to raise solar cap, cut net metering rates

 By | April 6, 2016

Dive Brief:

  • The Massachusett Senate passed a bill that would raise the net metering cap following a legislative committee approving language on the final bill after lawmakers from both chambers came to an impasse last year.
  • The state's House of Representatives passed the bill by a vote of 152-1 yesterday with the legislation, H. 4173, lifts the net metering cap by 3% for private and public solar projects and reduces existing retail remuneration rate to the wholesale rate for commercial and community solar projects once the state's 1600 MW solar target is reached. The bill also allows utilities to charge a minimum bill to cover fixed costs.
  • The bill awaits Gov. Charlie Baker (R)'s signature to go into effect.

Dive Insight:

Massachusetts' solar sector recently reported the legislative impasse delayed more than 500 solar projects worth about $618 million.

Now lawmakers passed a bill to end Massachusetts' net metering woes at least for the time being as the finalized bill awaits the governor's approval, with the House of Representatives passing the bill yesterday and the Senate approving it today. But the lone vote against the bill in the House yesterday was from Rep. Jonathan Hecht (D), who worried the bill would slow down solar energy's growth by lowering the net metering rates.

"I'm afraid if we do lower net metering rates by that large amount, it means many solar projects simply will not get built," Hecht said. "I remain deeply concerned that this legislation takes us down the wrong path on solar policy and once in place it will prove difficult to correct."

Frustrated lawmakers and stakeholders had earlier sent letters and petitions calling for more action as utilities hit their caps or rapidly approached them. More than 5,000 petitions and letters were sent to House Speaker Bob DeLeo (D), and 100 lawmakers sent a letter to their legislative compatriots demanding they lift the caps.

At issue in the bill is how to reimburse solar projects for the excess energy they export to the grid. The Senate pushed for remuneration credits closer to the retail rate and a cap high enough to reach the 1,600 MW solar target set under former Gov. Deval Patrick (D) in 2013 and endorsed by current Gov. Charlie Baker (R). The House instead wanted to increase the cap on net metering by 2% for public and private projects, and reduce the value of credits paid to large-scale solar owners from the retail rate of $0.16-$0.17/ kWh to the wholesale rate of $0.03-$0.04/kWh​.

The solar sector favored the Senate bill while utilities favored the House bill. The final bill passed by the committee appears to strike a compromise between both sides by raising the cap 3%, instead of the proposed 2%, and keeping remuneration closer to the retail rate for smaller-scale solar projects. The bill also enables utilities to charge a minimum fee, in an acknowledgment of arguments from the utility sector that solar users aren't paying their fair share to maintain the grid.

The solar sector appears relieved now that a final bill has been hashed out and stalled solar projects can move begin to forward again.

"While the compromise proposal includes cuts to the rates at which some customers are credited for solar power, it gets the industry moving again,” SEIA CEO Rhone Resch said in a statement. "We urge lawmakers to move quickly to approve this proposal and we look forward to continuing to work with the legislature and Gov. Baker to craft long-term, sustainable policies for the solar industry in Massachusetts."

The finalized bill now awaits the governor's signature, where it could then be signed into law.

Recommended Reading

The Boston Herald: Legislative committee reaches deal on solar power bill
PV Magazine: Massachusetts legislature reaches long-awaited deal on net metering
Masslive.com: Massachusetts House passes bill lifting solar net metering cap
PV Magazine: Massachusetts House, Senate approve bill to lift net metering caps Read more: http://www.pv-magazine.com/news/details/beitrag/breaking--massachusetts-house--senate-approve-bill-to-lift-net-metering-caps_100024060/#ixzz45AXRbx8h

Louisville Metro Councilman Hollander quotes Thoreau in defense of solar

Posted by Laura Arnold  /   April 10, 2016  /   Posted in solar, Uncategorized  /   No Comments

Metro Councilman Bill Hollander helped dig a hole during

Metro Councilman Bill Hollander helped dig a hole during a neighborhood tree planting in Butchertown. (Photo: Maggie Huber, Special to The C-J)

Hollander quotes Thoreau in defense of solar

Louisville Metro Councilman Bill Hollander last summer featured those now-controversial solar panels on Mark Frazar's Clifton home, celebrating them as an inspiration of sustainability.

"Mark installed the panels for both environmental and financial reasons," reported the District 9 Democrat's June 25 newsletter. "One way he is benefitting is net metering. Pursuant to state law, if an LG&E customer generates more electricity than a home or business uses, the excess electricity can be fed through the customer’s meter and onto the electric grid and LG&E applies a credit toward future power needs."

It was on that same day – June 25, 2015 – that the city Department of Codes and Violations cited Frazar for installing both a new roof and solar panels without first securing a Certificate of Appropriateness, according to documents obtained under the Kentucky Open Records law. The case goes to a review board on April 13.

On Friday, Hollander took to Facebook recall that same newsletter and to offer a defense of solar power in historic districts like Clifton, where there are extra limits on what people can do with their properties.

The newsletter features a weekly "Sustainability Story," the councilman's Facebook post said, adding that it features "someone doing a good thing for the environment."

Hollander wrote that "historic preservation is important," then quoted Henry David Thoreau: "What is the use of a house if you haven't got a tolerable planet to put it on?"

Friday's front page of the Courier-Journal featured the conflict in a story that began like this: A Louisville resident's rooftop solar installation has collided with one neighborhood's historic preservation requirements, setting what city officials described as a first-of-its-kind architectural design battle.

Frazar installed them without first getting permission, and city officials have wanted him to move them to the back of his house so they are not visible from the street. But there, they won't be as efficient because of the angle of the sun, extending the number of years for cost recovery, he argues.

The reaction I've seen on social media been mixed, but generally supportive of Frazar.

"Our city officials keep trying to act like we're some bastion of progress, but yet they keep sticking to antiquated policies and stale ideas. Get with it, Louisville," one woman commented on Facebook.

Others blamed Frazar for not following the rules.

Reporter James Bruggers writes this Watchdog Earth blog item. Reach him at (502) 582-4645 and at jbruggers@courier-journal.com.

Environment America Report ranks Indianapolis 2nd in solar PV per capita

Posted by Laura Arnold  /   April 09, 2016  /   Posted in solar, Uncategorized  /   No Comments

table

Report Ranks Top Solar Cities Of 2015

SI Staff

by SI Staff
on April 07, 2016

Sixty-four U.S. cities are now home to almost as much solar capacity as the entire country had installed at the end of 2010, according to a new report from Environment America and the Frontier Group.

Los Angeles (215 MW), San Diego (189 MW) and Phoenix (147 MW) topped the list for most solar power in the research and policy center study, titled “Shining Cities 2016: How Smart Local Policies Are Expanding Solar Power in America.”

In addition, the report shows Honolulu (417 W), Indianapolis (146 W) and San Jose (139 W) have the most solar panels per capita. [Emphasis added]

Plummeting costs, environmental concerns and technological innovation have all played a role in spurring the growth of solar energy, which was enough to power 5.4 million American homes last year, according to the report.

The report finds cities at the vanguard of the nation’s solar boom, with the top 20 solar cities – representing just 0.1% of U.S. land area – accounting for 6% of U.S. solar PV capacity at the end of 2015.

“The cities that are adding solar power the fastest are those that have made it a policy priority,” says Kim Norman, policy analyst at the Frontier Group and a report co-author. “This report shows that government is a key player in the effort to repower the U.S. with renewable energy.”

Environment America says that while solar power is soaring, utility companies are campaigning intensely to increase fees for rooftop solar, which they see as a direct threat to their business model.

Further, the U.S. Supreme Court has also stalled the Obama administration’s Clean Power Plan, which would cap carbon pollution from power plants and provide incentives for clean energy.

Environment America says it praises the cities leading the way on solar in spite of these attacks.

Along with its state affiliates, the organization has partnered with mayors around the country to release the findings of Shining Cities 2016.

“San Diego continues to lead the way in solar energy and remains a shining example to other cities when it comes to improving our environment through innovation,” says San Diego Mayor Kevin Faulconer. “Increasing solar energy will help reach our goal of 100 percent renewable energy use in the city by 2035 – a key element of San Diego’s landmark Climate Action Plan.”

“Honolulu continues to move forward toward a clean, sustainable energy future, and we are honored to be recognized by Environment America again for the city’s efforts to expand solar at municipal facilities,” says Honolulu Mayor Kirk Caldwell. “Last year, we successfully completed PV installation at our Kapolei Corporation Yard, which will reduce oil consumption and save taxpayers money over time on energy costs. This year, we are designing systems at four more corporation yards and at our H-POWER waste-to-energy plant, and this is just the beginning.”

The full report is available here.

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