Author Archives Laura Arnold

Indy LWV Municipal Candidate Forums; Are there candidate forums in your community?

Posted by Laura Arnold  /   August 31, 2015  /   Posted in Uncategorized  /   No Comments

League of Women Voters of Indianapolis

The League of Women Voters of Indianapolis is hosting candidate forums this fall for the City County Council races.Use the link on the right to locate your district. The dates, locations and districts for each candidate forum are all listed below.

Please forward this email to friends, coworkers, other organizations - or anyone else who would be interested in attending this free and informative event!

Want to volunteer at a candidate forum or have a question? Contact Membership@LWVIndy.org.

The district boundaries for the City County Council have changed. Find your new district. 
Districts 9, 12, 13, 14, 18 and 19September 8, 2015, 7 - 8:30 p.m.
John H. Boner Community Center, 2236 E. 10th St., Indianapolis, IN 46201

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Districts 1, 2, 3, 4, 5 and 7

September 9, 2015, 7 - 8:30 p.m.
Marquette Manor, 8140 Township Line Rd, Indianapolis, IN 46260

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Districts 6, 8, 10, 11, 15 and 16

September 15, 2015, 7 - 8:30 p.m.
Marian University, 3200 Cold Springs Rd, Indianapolis, IN 46222

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Districts 17, 20, 21, 22, 23, 24 and 25

September 16, 2015, 7 - 8:30 p.m.
University of Indianapolis, 1400 E. Hanna Ave, Indianapolis, IN 46227

Follow us on Facebook to receive updates on the candidate forums! 

 

 

Shunned by Duke Energy, N.C. solar installers turn to religious leaders for support

Posted by Laura Arnold  /   August 31, 2015  /   Posted in solar  /   No Comments

Shunned by big utility, N.C. solar installers turn to religious leaders for support

Updated

After failing to get support from the North Carolina’s largest public utility, a group of residential solar installers has appealed to a higher power in their effort to convince state lawmakers to extend the 35 percent renewable energy tax credit that is set to expire at the end of the year.

The solar installers have teamed with representatives of the religious community to continue making their case that without the tax credit, the companies will lose out on hundreds of installation jobs – and millions of dollars in revenue. They are calling on the General Assembly to pass a two-year extension to the tax credit that steps it down over time.

On the solar industry side, the new coalition includes top executives from Baker Renewable Energy, Southern Energy Management, Sundance Power Systems and Yes! Solar Solutions. They are joined by religious leaders from Kehillah Synagogue and the United Church of Chapel Hill and from the N.C. Interfaith Power and Light, a nonprofit organization that works on behalf of religious groups on climate change issues.

Susannah Tuttle, executive director of N.C. Interfaith Power and Light, says her group decided to join with the solar installers because it wants to show lawmakers what the renewable energy tax credit means to an often overlooked customer base with access to large roofs that are perfect for solar panels.

“The tax credit is a huge reason that so many houses of worship have been able to install solar panels on their roofs,” Tuttle says. “It’s taken years for many of them to get to the point where they are ready to move forward with installation. But if the tax credits are not continued, those projects will just stop.”

Tuttle says it is often more difficult for religious organizations to get the money together for a large solar installation project because of their nonprofit status. For tax reasons, many congregations have had to form L.L.C.s to pool donations, a process that often takes years to complete, or go after a single donor who is willing to fund the project. “Without the tax credit, the inventive to donate goes away,” Tuttle says. “But these projects are important because the money saved on energy costs can be put back into the faith organization’s mission to serve the community.”

Rabbi Jen Feldman of Kehillah Synagogue says her congregation raised $106,000 to install solar panels on the synagogue’s roof. The project took several years to come together. Once complete, it is expected to reduce the synagogue’s energy costs by 75 percent. She credits the renewable energy tax credit with helping to secure donations.

“We came at this from a place of faith,” Feldman says. “Climate change is such a huge, intractable problem that you can be stunned into doing nothing. That’s not a Jewish value. We have a big sunny roof and wanted to do something with it.”

The partnership between the religious organizations and the solar installers grew out of conversations about the tax credit’s role in getting rooftop projects going on places of worship, says Yes! Solar CEO Kathy Miller. “Everyone is talking about the solar farms and what will happen to them. But we thought it was important to highlight what the tax credit means to the end user.”

As part of their campaign to extend the tax credit, the solar installers wrote an open letter to Duke (NYSE: DUK) President and CEO Lynn Good, calling on the company to throw the company’s weight behind the effort. Duke declined the invitation, saying through a spokesman that the company is “neutral” on whether the tax credit is extended.

It is unclear how receptive the General Assembly is to extending the tax credit. The House included an extension in its budget proposal, but the Senate did not. With the two chambers still working out a long-overdue compromise, it remains to be seen whether the tax credit is included in whatever deal is reached.

Iowa electric co-op withdraws proposed additional $57.50 fee for solar customers

Posted by Laura Arnold  /   August 28, 2015  /   Posted in solar  /   No Comments
solar roof

Iowa co-op withdraws proposed fee for solar customers

PHOTO BY

A rural electric cooperative in Iowa has backed away from a plan to impose an additional $57.50 monthly fee on customers with solar panels.

On Thursday afternoon, Pella Cooperative Electric informed the Iowa Utilities Board that it was withdrawing the tariff it filed earlier this summer.

“It kinda made my day,” said Bryce Engbers, a hog farmer living outside of Grinnell. Engbers has arrays on his house and on each of two confinement barns, and had said he'd sooner remove the arrays than pay the higher fee.

“There are a lot of eyes on this, and I think it was a great move by [Pella], and I appreciate it,” Engbers said.

In June, Pella Cooperative Electric sent a letter to its approximately 3,000 members telling them that anyone installing solar panels after Aug. 15 would be charged the higher monthly fee.

Residential customers now pay a $27.50 monthly fixed fee. The additional charge would have meant an $85 monthly fixed fee for those with solar panels. Members with solar panels installed and operational before that date would not have to pay the higher fee for another five years.

The co-op's management had commissioned a routine cost-of-service study earlier this year to determine whether any class of customers was not paying its fair share towards maintenance of the power system.

John Smith, the utility's chief executive officer, said the study made clear that customers with their own solar generation — because they use less power — would as a consequence not pay their share of fixed costs.

The fee hike irked a couple of co-op members enough that they met with the co-op's board of directors and asked to see the cost-of-service study. The utility's management refused and then, apparently, relented.

“They gave us something,” Engbers said. “I don't know if it was a cost-of-service study, but that's what they said it was.”

The Environmental Law & Policy Center then got involved, and filed a petition to intervene before the utilities board. The center said that a fee levied only on customers with distributed generation facilities ran counter to two provisions in Iowa law.

The state's Office of Consumer Advocate, concerned that the fee might have constituted discrimination against solar customers, also weighed in. It told the utility it wanted to see the cost-of-service study and any other documents used to calculate and justify the monthly charge.

Smith had previously declined a request from Midwest Energy News to review the study, saying it is “confidential” and “not subject to distribution.” He could not be reached Thursday afternoon for comment.

The co-op issued a press release that said, in part: “The proposed revision in the facility charge has drawn significant attention and has portrayed the Cooperative as discriminatory in establishing a different facility charge for those members who elect to install and maintain on-site generation which will provide some, but not all, the electrical energy needed to supply their needs. That claim is incorrect.

“The Cooperative has a long history of developing rates that collect sufficient and fair cost recovery; simply put, the cost causer must be the cost payer,” Smith stated. “It is unfair to the rest of the membership who would have to pay more so that another rate class can pay less.”

“... we have decided to withdraw the proposed increase on the facility charge for members who own or lease distributed generation until such time that we can better educate our members and the community as to the fair and equitable recovery of fixed costs.”

Josh Mandelbaum, an Environmental Law & Policy Center lawyer who represented two co-op members as well as a few environmental and solar organizations in the matter before the utilities board, said he suspected that when Pella decided to hike the fee for its tiny number of solar customers, the utility “didn't have a sense of how that might impact members, and the concerns that members would raise. When that was provided, to their credit, they revisited the issue and withdrew the tariff.”

Although the Pella proposal likely would have affected only a small number of customers, Mandelbaum said, “The concern that we have is that although each individual co-op or muni might be a small entity in itself, between co-ops and munis they serve collectively about 30 percent of Iowa customers.

“We want to stop barriers from going up (for those customers), and this was a particularly egregious example of that barrier. The $85 charge was larger than anything we've ever seen — not just in Iowa, but around the country. The Minnesota commission just in the last week or two rejected a co-op that tried to impose a $5 charge.”

The debate over whether self-generating customers are being subsidized by the rest of a utility's ratepayers is playing out across the country.

In the Midwest, Wisconsin utilities got approval for similar fixed rate charges to be imposed on solar customers.

Michigan utilities, on the other hand, are pushing to eliminate the state's net metering law in favor of a system in which solar generators buy all of their power from the utility at retail and sell back excess power at wholesale. Utility officials say this accomplishes the same goal as imposing a monthly fixed rate.

Mandelbaum said he hopes other utilities will take note of Pella's experience. He pointed to the Farmer's Electric Co-op in Kalona, Iowa, which has been in the forefront of embracing and fostering renewable and distributed generation.

“There are other ways this can be done, and hopefully Pella revisting its decision is a sign that they're willing to work with members to look at other ways this can be done. Hopefully other co-ops will do the same.”

One thought on “Iowa co-op withdraws proposed fee for solar customers”

  1. “… we have decided to withdraw the proposed increase on the facility charge for members who own or lease distributed generation until such time that we can better educate our members and the community as to the fair and equitable recovery of fixed costs.”
    Man… educate yourselves, while you’re at it, Pella… a fee of over $50, penalizing customers for reducing energy use via solar doesn’t make sense in any rational universe. Will they also charge Energy Star homes? A per-LED lamp fee perhaps? A special line-item for low-energy-consumption widows? Give me a break.
    If someone puts in a big enough system to seriously back-feed the grid, negotiations may be in order, if this has a measurable effect on grid equipment. But a catch-all “you have solar; pay up” is quite obviously nothing but punitive.

Duke Energy starting South Carolina customer solar generating program; RFP issued

Posted by Laura Arnold  /   August 27, 2015  /   Posted in solar, Uncategorized  /   No Comments

Duke Energy starting customer solar generating program

Staff Report

gsanews@scbiznews.com
Published Aug. 27, 2015

Duke Energy is seeking proposals for about 53 megawatts of utility scale solar capacity that would start operating in the company’s S.C. service areas by the end of 2016. Customers can sign up for rooftop and ground-mounted solar rebates starting Oct. 13.

The request advances Duke Energy’s Distributed Energy Resource Program that was approved July 15 by the S.C. Public Service Commission and stems from the Distributed Energy Resource Act of 2014. Duke Energy Carolinas and Duke Energy Progress have about 720,000 customers in South Carolina.

Duke Energy has issued a request for proposals in a customer program that will generate up to about 53 megawatts of utility scale solar capacity in the company’s S.C. service areas by the end of 2016. (Photo provided by Duke Energy)
Duke Energy has issued a request for proposals in a customer program that will generate up to about 53 megawatts of utility scale solar capacity in the company’s S.C. service areas by the end of 2016. (Photo provided by Duke Energy)The request asks bidders to offer a power-purchase agreement to the company orprovide a proposal that allows Duke Energy ownership of the project or both. Utility scale projects shouldhave a capacity of more than 1 MW and no more than 10 MW.In a separate request, the company is seeking up to 5 MW of solar capacity for its Shared Solar Program. The program allows customers such as nonprofit organizations, churches, community centers, renters and schools to subscribe to the output of a specific solar facility and receive credit on their monthly bill for the energy produced from that facility. The customer receives a bill credit of approximately 6 cents per kilowatt-hour produced.

The programs are expected to add up to 110 MW of solar energy by 2021. Currently, less than 2 MW of solar capacity is connected to Duke Energy in the state.

“The collaborative vision to bring solar to South Carolina is now becoming a reality to the benefit of our customers, communities and the state,” said Clark Gillespy, Duke Energy’s South Carolina president.

 

Michigan tea party legislator pushing for more clean energy and to incentivize solar energy growth

Posted by Laura Arnold  /   August 26, 2015  /   Posted in Uncategorized  /   No Comments
Solar panels at Dow Diamond in Rep. Gary Glenn's district.

Solar panels at Dow Diamond in Rep. Gary Glenn's district.

Michigan tea party legislator pushing for more clean energy

Michigan State Rep. Gary GlennA Michigan lawmaker more widely known for his strongly conservative positions on social issues may be an unlikely ally for those pushing for more clean energy here.

State Rep. Gary Glenn, a first-term tea party Republican who also heads the state chapter of the American Family Association, says he wants to incentivize — “not mandate” — solar energy growth in the state.

In an interview with Midwest Energy News last week, Glenn said he is preparing to release an energy package next month that would encourage distributed generation and allow ratepayers to buy renewable energy from alternative suppliers.

Glenn is the majority vice chair of the House Energy Policy Committee who observers say has taken a strong interest in energy issues this session.

Glenn aims to lift the current 1 percent cap on net metering for solar projects, the opposite direction Senate Republicans are headed. He also wants to restructure the 10 percent limit on customers who can participate in Retail Open Access that would allow customers to choose an alternative energy supplier if it is for renewable energy.

Major utilities DTE Energy and Consumers Energy are fighting against both current policies, looking to eliminate net metering and eliminate electric choice.

Glenn says his overall goal is to incentivize, not mandate, clean-energy growth here.

“We ought to maintain (net metering) and incentivize it so we have more people using solar and relieving pressure on the grid,” Glenn said last week at the Capitol. “I don’t believe in mandating any form of energy, but we should be incentivizing solar as much as possible.

“The fact that there’s not more solar is not because there are more cloudy days in Michigan than other states,” he added. “We have the least incentivizing policy in the country.”

Glenn’s comments came shortly before the Senate Energy and Technology Committee held a hearing last week on SB 438, a Republican-backed plan that would eliminate net metering and which is drawing strong criticism from solar advocates and some conservative groups.

Instead of eliminating net metering — as major investor-owned utilities want to see — Glenn wants to lift the 1 percent cap and allow people to be credited for the energy they put back on the grid at the same retail rate they get it from utilities.

“As part of a competition-driven, free-market and incentive-based package, it gives consumers choice,” Glenn said.

I don’t believe in mandating any form of energy, but we should be incentivizing solar as much as possible.

Glenn’s proposal could end up being the fourth sweeping energy policy to surface this year as Michigan’s 10 percent renewable energy standard levels off at the end of 2015.

Glenn’s plan differs from Senate Republicans who want to opt for an Integrated Resource Planning process and eliminate net metering, and a Democratic proposal to double the RPS by 2020. His stance also differs from fellow House Republicans, who want to return Michigan to being a fully regulated state and allow the renewable and efficiency standards to level off and not increase.

As in other states across the country, Glenn represents a group of Michigan Republicans pushing for more renewable energy but doing so through the market or mechanisms other than standards.

The Green Tea Coalition and the group Tell Utilities Solar won’t be Killed — headed by former Republican Congressman Barry Goldwater, Jr. — are mobilizing in states where they say policies conducive to rooftop solar are being attacked by large utilities that feel threatened by increasing amounts of distributed generation.

Glenn said he is adapting a policy that might be palatable on both sides of the aisle because he doesn’t believe the votes are there to extend Michigan’s RPS or to fully deregulate or regulate the state.

In addition to allowing customers seeking renewable energy to get it from an alternative supplier, Glenn also wants to open up the choice market to all taxpayer-funded entities, such as K-12 schools, universities, prisons and all “state and political subdivisions.”

In 2008, Michigan lawmakers capped electric choice at 10 percent of a utility’s capacity. Thousands of entities are part of a waiting list to participate. Allowing customers to purchase renewables from alternative suppliers would effectively use Retail Open Access as a way to expand the amount of clean energy generated here, Glenn says.

“It’s a significant incentive to buy from a renewable source, but it’s not a mandate,” he said.

Jeff Irwin, a Democratic state representative from Ann Arbor, said he’s familiar with Glenn’s plan and agrees that it could be a different means to reach the same ends that clean-energy supporters seek.

“There’s a natural connection between advocates of clean, renewable, homegrown energy and folks who believe in customer choice and liberty,” Irwin said.

Last year, Irwin introduced a series of bills with bipartisan support that he called “energy freedom,” which also would have incentivized self-generation. Irwin said he plans to reintroduce that legislation again this year.

Irwin said it’s difficult to determine whether there are other Republicans like Glenn who, with  help from Democrats, could muster enough votes in both Republican-dominated chambers for clean-energy legislation.

“As we see other proposals, particularly from (Senate Republicans), that’s a real point of difference in the Republican Party,” Irwin said. “Some Republicans want to smother the solar industry by wrapping it in red tape. Other people who have a more free-market approach want it to be economically viable.”

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