2007, 2008 CA legislative summary- This is complicated. Call your legislative office for help. Senator Yee's office is one of the best. So is Simitian's.
1. AB 1969 Expansion
AB 1969 (2006, Yee) was adopted and expanded by the PUC at the end of
2007. This means that now, any customer of a utility in California may
sell renewable energy (solar, water, etc.) back to the utility at a
predetermined rate, called “feed-in tariffs”. The feed-in tariff is
offered at the Market Price Referent (MPR) to renewable facilities up to
1.5 megawatts. Customers that opt for the feed-in tariff cannot receive
CSI (CA Solar Initiative) or SGIP (Self Generation Incentive Program)
funds to subsidize the building of their renewable facilities.
2. Net Metering
“Net metering” is the process by which the collection of solar or
other renewable energy runs your energy meter backwards. It can only go
back to zero. This is the best deal for solar in California, as opposed
to other forms of renewable energy, because the customer’s meter runs
backwards at “full retail” value. PG&E after a year’s true up does not compensate producers for excess generation. This has been a major liability for school districts and local government because each building requires its own installation. Belmont, through current Vice-Mayor Dickenson and CCAG unsuccessfully carried SB 451 last year to change this- essentially allowing an authority to put solar where it would be best, for example Nesbit, and generate enough for the entire district including foggy Fox.
ftp://ftp.cpuc.ca.gov/puc/aboutcpuc/2007+final+legislative+wrap+up.ppt and search for 451
Other net metering programs in California run at the generation rate, which accounts for the utility’s transmission and distribution (T&D) charges.
3. California Solar Initiative & Self-Generation Incentive Program (SGIP)
Cash incentives combined with federal tax incentives to build renewable; can cover up to 50% of costs.
Legislation this year:
4. SB 451 (Kehoe, 2007). Vetoed.
This bill would have required electrical corporations to buy renewable energy from any customer at the feed-in tariff rate. This bill was vetoed and is now unnecessary due to the CPUC’s AB 1969 (Yee) implementation.
5. AB 2820 (Huffman): Excess metering
This bill will allow local public agencies to transfer renewable electricity from the public agency’s renewable energy generation meters to offset the energy demand at the public agency’s other offsite facilities. This bill requires a local public agency to pay the investor owned utilities (IOUs) for use of its transmission and distribution (T&D) facilities, as well as any applicable standby charges for renewable energy technologies that are not already exempted under current law.
6. AB 1223 (Arambula): Excess metering for agriculture
Would have allowed agriculture to utilize net metering: one-site production of renewable energy to offset costs at other sites. Issue at the core of the debate was the T&D charges.
7. AB 1807 (Fuentes): Renewable electric generation facilities: feed-in tariffs
This bill would require the PUC to develop feed-in tariffs for eligible renewable energy resources of more than 20 megawatts
8. AB 2573 (Leno): San Francisco Model: Net/Excess Metering. Chaptered.
Options for 2008 to allow compensation for excess production after the True Up:
1. Propose alternatives to AB 2820, AB 1223, or AB 1807 in case they fail. This could be legislation for excess metering for local public agencies. However, challenging points in this area will be the T&D charges and the matter of who gets to keep the Renewable Energy
Credits (RECs) which was the basis of SB451's veto.
2. Propose similar legislation to the San Francisco model provided by AB 2573
3. Change the law so that CSI and SGIP-funded facilities sell the excess energy back onto the market. This would allow them to size to capacity instead of on-site electricity load, and would increase the amount of renewable energy use in California. Key issues: ratepayer subsidies the facilities then also pays for the electricity, and who keeps the RECs.
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