Electricity customers pay for groups that lobby against clean energy, report says

Posted by Laura Arnold  /   May 15, 2017  /   Posted in Uncategorized  /   No Comments

Electricity customers pay for groups that lobby against clean energy, report says

Successful oversight of trade group membership dues has faded away in many states, report says.

Few political organizations have the “luxury of subsidization” enjoyed by the Edison Electric Institute (EEI) and other trade groups that represent the utility industry, according to a new report.

Utility customers foot the costs of “political and public relations” activities of these industry trade groups, the report’s authors contend. Requiring customers to pay a portion of the annual membership dues means customers might be paying for political activities with which they may not agree and from which they may not benefit, the report says.

Electric utility companies routinely receive permission from state regulators to include at least a portion of their dues payments to industry associations in their operating expenses, the Energy & Policy Institute, a research and watchdog group, said in the new report. Those operating expenses are passed on to customers, not to the shareholders of these investor-owned utilities.

“Given how these organizations promote fracking and natural gas infrastructure, propose bailouts for nuclear power plants, and spread misinformation regarding the science of climate change, they are also all political in nature,” the authors wrote in the report.

The report, “Paying for Utility Politics: How Utility Ratepayers Are Forced to Fund the Edison Electric Institute and Other Political Organizations,” focuses on the Edison Electric Institute (EEI), the trade association for the nation’s investor-owned electric utilities, as an example of political influence from a utility association. The report’s authors argued that the membership dues might not be funding activities that EEI defines as lobbying, under the Internal Revenue Code, but they still fund certain types of political activities.

For many years, the National Association of Regulatory Utility Commissioners (NARUC), an association of state regulators, worked with industry trade groups like EEI and the American Gas Association (AGA), which represents gas utility companies, to break out the membership dues and decide which costs could be recovered from ratepayers.

But that system ended more than a decade ago. Today, on its membership invoices to members, EEI highlights what percentage of costs are used for lobbying, based on the Internal Revenue Code. The utility company then uses that percentage to determine what to charge to shareholders. The remaining portion is charged to customers.

When asking regulators for rate increases, electric utility companies provide “evidence to support each recoverable expense, including a portion of trade association dues,” EEI spokesman Brian Reil said in a statement emailed to ThinkProgress.

The lobbying portion of EEI’s dues, which is not recoverable, is calculated and reported each year using the Internal Revenue Code’s … definition of ‘lobbying and political activities’ as required to be reported on IRS Form 990,” Reil said. “EEI activities in certain regulatory proceedings and communications efforts, for example, are not lobbying as defined by federal law.”

The D.C. metropolitan region is filled with associations that represent almost every business or industry. These groups create educational materials, provide training to their members, and engage in public advertising campaigns, while their lobbyists seek to change policy at federal, state, and local levels. The groups can also conduct fundraising on behalf of political candidates through associated political action committees (PACs).

The American Gas Association, Nuclear Energy Institute, and U.S. Chamber of Commerce are other associations whose annual membership dues are often included in utility companies’ rate requests, according to the report.

Consumer groups have succeeded in getting a larger percentage of Pacific Gas and Electric’s trade association dues paid by shareholders. CREDIT: AP Photo/Ben Margot

The groups’ political stances might be problematic — or even against the interests of — the ratepayers who are funding their utility’s membership. For instance, renewable energy advocates have complained about EEI’s stance on rooftop solar in some states. The recent growth of solar energy along with net-metering policies have led investor-owned utility companies and EEI to campaign to either weaken or do away with net-metering programs in states, according to the Energy & Policy Institute.

Under net-metering policies, if rooftop solar owners generate more electricity than they use, the utility will buy the excess power at the retail rate. EEI reportedly lobbied to change net-metering policy in Arizona, a state at the center of the debate on how to compensate owners of rooftop solar.

Matt Kasper, research director at the Energy & Policy Institute, contends that state consumer advocates and attorneys general are justified in asking the investor-owned utilities how ratepayers benefit from the fees that go to EEI. In his research, Kasper, who co-authored the report, found that an Oklahoma-based utility submitted invoices to its regulator that revealed the utility company’s EEI dues increased every year from 2011 to 2016, a total of 26 percent over that timespan.

As consumer advocates and offices of attorneys general see the increased membership dues, “they’re probably going to be more inclined to challenge them,” Kasper said.

Under its old relationship with trade groups, NARUC conducted annual audits of the financial records of EEI and other industry trade groups. Based on the audits, state regulators would rule whether utilities could collect a significantly smaller portion of their EEI dues from ratepayers.

However, more than a decade ago, NARUC’s audits of EEI and the other groups stopped, creating difficulty for consumer advocates to understand how the groups spend ratepayer money. The report’s authors recommended NARUC revive its Committee on Utility Association Oversight, a committee charged with reviewing the costs of the utility associations.

The committee, which was disbanded in 2000, could determine the percentage of trade groups’ operations that are political in nature and therefore should not be funded by ratepayers. Some consumer advocates and watchdogs, including the Energy & Policy Institute, believe there are cases where customers should not be required to pay for any amount of a utility’s membership fees in a trade association.

Certain states continue to take a close look at utilities’ membership fees in industry trade groups. In California, The Utility Reform Network in 2013 succeeded in getting 43.3 percent of EEI dues paid by Pacific Gas & Electric Co.’s shareholders during that utility’s rate request and not by ratepayers, rather than the 25 percent the San Francisco-headquartered utility had originally requested.

“But successful oversight of EEI dues has faded away in other states,” the report said. The independent review of industry association dues that was once provided by NARUC has been replaced by “an unreliable system of self-reporting” by EEI and its utility members, which have a “self-interest in maximizing the amount of their dues” that will be paid by customers, the report concluded.

Virginia utility’s renewable offering seen as way to stop competitors

Posted by Laura Arnold  /   May 15, 2017  /   Posted in Uncategorized  /   No Comments

dominion-1170x786

http://southeastenergynews.com/2017/05/12/virginia-utilitys-renewable-offering-seen-as-way-to-stop-competitors/

A plan by Dominion Energy to supply 100 percent renewable power to its commercial and industrial customers has been welcomed by some clean energy advocates, but others say it will effectively forbid third parties from competing in this lucrative and burgeoning market.

“This will impede the renewable choices of its customers,” said Ron Cerniglia, Director of Government Affairs for retail supplier Direct Energy, which has been planning to enter the Virginia market. “Essentially, retailers will be locked out of this important class of customers. Dominion is using its monopoly authority to prevent retailers from entering that market.”

Will Cleveland, who follows generation policy developments for the Southern Environmental Law Center (SELC) in Charlottesville, is “suspect” about Dominion’s motives.

“Does Dominion’s filing seek to substantively advance renewable generation in Virginia, or is it really only designed to cut off competition without achieving any measureable increase in renewable generation,” Cleveland asked. “Can a utility just come in and get some really bad tariff approved that nobody actually signs up for, but still blocks third-party competition?”

Dominion Energy did not respond to requests for comment.

Earlier this year, Direct Energy sought permission from the State Corporation Commission (SCC), which regulates utilities, to market a 100 percent renewable energy product. But in its ruling, the SCC allowed that authority only if the state’s investor-owned utilities did not have a similar offering available to their ratepayers.

Beginning on page 2 of its filing, Dominion cites the specific language in Virginia’s legal code (Va. Code § 56-577 A 5) to assert how its offer of a 100 percent renewable product blocks any such offerings from competitors.

“Dominion has had 10 years (since lawmakers in 2007 ended the state’s experiment with customer choice) to file a renewable energy tariff,” Cerniglia said. “We’re very concerned with these developments. It is certainly our intention to intervene” at the SCC.

Dominion is proposing six new voluntary rates, or tariffs, for its “Continuous Renewable Generation” (CRG) Rate Schedules. They are to be available soon for eligible customers for a minimum of five years, or longer if mutually agreed upon. It said the intermittency of solar, wind and other renewable sources will be packaged to supply round-the-clock delivery of power through a portfolio of external and internal options dedicated to would-be customers.

Dominion’s filing states “the renewable energy supplies may take the form of a single PPA (power purchase agreement) to serve a single customer; however, it is anticipated that many customers will prefer a bundle of differing renewable sources. In such cases and depending on the customer interests, the company may assemble a portfolio of multiple resources designed to service individual or multiple customers.”

Any sources of renewable generation from aspiring wholesale suppliers “must be within the geographic scope of the PJM wholesale market,” Dominion states, which includes most of Virginia and all or parts of ten other states.

The SELC’s Cleveland and Tony Smith, president of solar developer Secure Futures LLC in Staunton, said they expect a lot of stakeholders to participate and challenge whether individual rates – if approved by the SCC – are in the state’s best long-term interest.

Smith, a frequent critic of Virginia’s energy policies, said the filing is “very well-orchestrated” and builds on a two failed bids by Appalachian Power Co. to try to achieve the same outcome.

The expected contest over Dominion’s filing may come down to amending the rule prohibiting third-party competition. Smith said he likes to think if Dominion would approve, then its application could sail through the SCC. “That’s where the fight will occur.”

Cleveland added: “Right now, this is just a skeleton of an idea. It’s going to involve a lot of Q & A and digging in the (SCC) docket to figure out what this thing is. Ignoring the monopolistic aspects, it’s not clear this will be a good thing for customers.”


Jim Pierobon is a former Chief Energy Writer at the Houston Chronicle and is the principal writer of The Energy Fix blog. He is a policy, marketing and social media strategist who has reported on, testified and consulted about solar energy, energy efficiency, smarter grids, energy cyber-security, fossil fuel price spikes and the rise and fall -- and the rise again -- of nuclear energy. He resides in Northern Virginia.

Study to utilities: Fudging the solar facts can get consumers on your side

Posted by Laura Arnold  /   May 12, 2017  /   Posted in solar  /   No Comments

Is utility-scale solar a better investment than rooftop solar? Sure - if you only ignore the benefits that rooftop installations bring to the grid.

Is utility-scale solar a better investment than rooftop solar? Sure - if you only ignore the benefits that rooftop installations bring to the grid

Study to utilities: Fudging the solar facts can get consumers on your side

Deception wins in Indiana as governor signs anti-solar bill

Posted by Laura Arnold  /   May 03, 2017  /   Posted in 2017 Indiana General Assembly, solar  /   No Comments

Seal of the State of Indiana

Deception wins in Indiana as governor signs anti-solar bill

IndianaDG Letter to Gov. Holcomb: (1) Veto SB 309; (2) Ask IURC to Do Cost-Benefit Study of Net Metering; and (3) Create State Energy Policy Process with ALL Stakeholders

Posted by Laura Arnold  /   May 02, 2017  /   Posted in 2017 Indiana General Assembly, IPL Rate REP, Northern Indiana Public Service Company (NIPSCO), solar, Uncategorized, wind  /   No Comments

Me and Rep. Ron Bacon_2

IndianaDG President Laura Ann Arnold on the left and solar home owner Rep. Ron Bacon (R-Chandler) on the right.

Laura Ann Arnold

545 E. Eleventh Street

Indianapolis, Indiana  46202-2627

(317) 635-1701

(317) 503-5123 cell

Laura.Arnold@IndianaDG.net

Laura.Arnold@thearnoldgroup.biz

 

May 1, 2017

 

Governor Eric Holcomb

State House

Indianapolis, Indiana  46204

 

RE: (1) Veto SB 309; (2) Ask IURC to Do Cost-Benefit Study of Net Metering; and (3) Create State Energy Policy Process with ALL Stakeholders

Dear Governor Holcomb:

Indiana Distributed Energy Alliance (Indiana DG), a non-profit corporation with a broad coalition effort amongst businesses, individuals, elected officials, and other organizations, respectfully requests your help and leadership in advancing energy policy for the State of Indiana.  First, we ask that you veto Senate Bill 309.  Second, we ask that you direct the Indiana Utility Regulatory Commission (IURC) to do a cost-benefit study of net metering as it is the agency with the technical expertise most qualified to examine this important policy enacted under the Daniel administration.  Finally, we ask that you lead Indiana with a robust state energy policy process that involves all stakeholders.

  1. Veto Senate Bill 309

First, I respectfully request that you veto Senate Bill 309. On Monday, April 17, 2017, a group of business members with IndianaDG and I met with Rebecca Holwerda, Policy Director and Legislative Affairs for the Office of the Governor.  At that time, I gave a presentation providing background and information concerning our request for you to veto SB 309.  I’d like to clarify a number of issues that will further demonstrate why a veto of SB 309 is the right decision for your Administration.

SB 309 threatens the ability of Hoosiers to install and to recoup the cost of an investment in solar, small wind or other distributed generation energy systems. Under SB 309, after December 31, 2017, investor owned electric utility customers will have a shorter amount of time to (1) recoup the cost of their personal investment in an energy system for their home or business, and (2) enjoy continued energy savings for the duration of the life of this investment. If prospective solar customers merely recoup the cost of their investment without time to enjoy the financial benefits, the majority of them just won’t GO SOLAR.

Two Indiana investor owned electric utilities, Indianapolis Power and Light (IPL) and Northern Indiana Public Service Company (NIPSCO), have already provided extensive incentives for solar and distributed generation through a pricing mechanism called Voluntary Feed-in Tariff (VFIT or FIT) programs. I participated in all three of these cases before the IURC (Cause Nos. 44018, 43922, and 44393).  From those programs, (1) more than 100 MWs of voluntary FIT contracts with IPL and NIPSCO were produced; (2) IPL has 97 MWs of solar photovoltaic (PV) FIT 15 year contracts with payment to customers of $0.20 to $0.24/kWh; (3) NIPSCO has 15 MWs of solar PV FIT 15 year contracts with payments to customers ranging from $0.26 to $0.30/kWh with 2% per year price escalators.  Compare that to the mere 20 MWs of net metering distributed generation that is paid for at the retail rates, or an amount that is 2-4 times the retail rate.  See slide 17 in the attached PowerPoint.  It is also important to note that most of the electricity produced by solar net metering customers is consumed directly by the customer, and thus, at times, NO payment to the net metering customer is necessary.

The fundamental difference between these VFIT programs and net metering is the utility’s cost recovery. It appears that the real issue IS NOT a so-called subsidy but rather the utilities’ ability to obtain quick cost recovery with the VFIT programs via the quarterly Fuel Adjustment Clause (FAC) process filed before the Indiana Utility Regulatory Commission. SB 309 will take away the kWh for kWh swap that net metering provides and instead provide this coveted cost recovery FAC mechanism for net metering experienced by the utility. If the utilities’ real concern is just obtaining this covered FAC cost recovery mechanism for net metering customers, why is there so much more in SB 309 that takes aim at net metering customers and an industry that is growing Indiana’s economy and job opportunities?   

The real question is who will control the utilization of solar technology. Will solar energy be owned and controlled by monopoly electric utilities or individual utility customers? What will the impact of changes in net metering do to the distributed generation market in Indiana?

  1. Direct IURC to Do Cost-Benefit Study of Net Metering

There is a desperate need for real Indiana based data and information concerning the impact of net metering. As has been done in numerous other states, Indiana needs a cost-benefit study performed by the Indiana Utility Regulatory Commission (IURC).  There was considerable discussion amongst state legislators about the need for such a study to provide state lawmakers with real tangible data to then evaluate and make appropriate energy policy decisions.

Several proposed amendments were drafted yet not offered to send this issue to the IURC, however, opponents advanced the notions that (1) the IURC did not want to do such a study, and (2) the results of such an IURC study could be worse than SB 309.  In fact, during my recent personal discussion with IURC Chairman Jim Atterholt, I was told that the IURC did not convey to state legislators they were not interested or unwilling to do such a study.  Rather, the IURC wants specific direction on what they should examine and how they should perform such a study of net metering.

The notion that the IURC would make proposed changes itself via an order or administrative rulemaking without due process is not plausible, yet this is what state lawmakers were told by the opposition. Specifically, opponents compared the IURC to a strange, ill-fated action that occurred before the Nevada Public Utilities Commission (NV PUC). The NV PUC took action on net metering with disastrous results to the solar industry, resulting in the Governor choosing not to reappoint two of the PUC members who were involved in this action and in the Nevada state legislature currently working to reverse the result of the NV PUC action.  However, the NV PUC is not an appropriate comparison to the IURC.  First, the IURC has never done such a thing and is instead awaiting direction from the Governor. Second, the solar market and net metering in Nevada is very different than here in the State of Indiana.

Solar Net Metering Comparison of States

See also Slide 18 from attached PowerPoint.  This shows that Nevada is the 6th state in solar net metering capacity per residential customer, while Indiana is 39th.  The fact of the matter is that Indiana is far behind in terms of net metering, and a cap is already in place in the IURC’s current net metering rule.  Once the cap in the IURC’s current net metering rule is reached, that would’ve been the more appropriate time to have a discussion.  But, if legislators would like to know more information about the impact of net metering now, an IURC conducted investigation would be the more appropriate thing to do, rather than a rush to end net metering in 2022 with state legislation in 2017 that has no IURC-backed investigation to support such a drastic action.

  1. Create State Energy Policy Process with ALL Stakeholders

I implore you to take steps to create a new Indiana State Energy Policy that involves ALL stakeholders and is open and transparent. Former Governor Mike Pence began such a process, however, it was shutdown barely after it was started. I personally participated in another such process conducted by former Lt. Governor John Mutz in the early 1980s.

Net metering is not the only issue worthy of a comprehensive policy review. For instance, updating avoided cost rates would be another worthy exercise that could provide great gains in customer-owned generation if conducted.  The State of Michigan has recently undergone such an exercise, reviewing rates under the Public Utility Regulatory Policy Act (PURPA). See http://www.michigan.gov/mpsc/0,4639,7-159-16393_74342---,00.html.

Other states including Illinois have also initiated comprehensive energy and utility policy reviews.  Before we have another wave of utility-backed legislation, direction like a comprehensive energy and utility policy review from the Governor may prove useful to legislators in the future.

Thank you for your consideration of my three requests: (1) Veto SEA 309; (2) Ask IURC to Do Cost-Benefit Study of Net Metering; and (3) Create State Energy Policy Process with ALL Stakeholders.

I stand willing and ready to assist you and your Administration.

_____________________________

Laura Ann Arnold

545 E. Eleventh Street

Indianapolis, IN 46202-2627

(317) 635-1701

(317) 503-5123 cell

Laura.Arnold@IndianaDG.net

Laura.Arnold@thearnoldgroup.biz


 

LAA Letter to Governor Holcomb_2017-05-01

This PowerPoint document was shared with the Governor's Office on 4/17/17 and provides additional background and history of net metering in Indiana.

Presentation for Gov Holcomb on SEA 309_v11

IndianaDG Business Members


 

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