More Than Half of US States Are Studying or Changing Net Metering Policies

A new report by the N.C. Clean Energy Technology Center lists distributed solar policy changes in Q3 from around the country.

In the third quarter of 2015, there were 91 instances in 42 states of proposed or enacted solar policy changes, according to the N.C. Clean Energy Technology Center’s latest “50 States of Solar” report.

The most common policy action was around net metering. Regulators or legislators in 19 states considered or decided on changes to their solar net-metering policies in the third quarter, and 12 states were conducting a solar-valuation or net-metering study. Factoring in overlap, a total of 27 states were either studying or changing their net-metering policies in Q3.

Part of the reason so many states are addressing net metering is because of the solar sector's success. Due to rapid solar adoption, utilities in several states are approaching or have already hit their previously established net-metering caps, which is triggering a review of the policy.

Some states are expanding the policy, while others, such as California and Nevada, are considering a successor tariff. Hawaii recently became the first state in the nation to end its solar net-metering program.

“This has been another incredible year of growth in distributed solar thanks to rapidly falling costs and policies like net metering,” said Benjamin Inskeep, energy policy analyst at the Center. “However, some states are tapping on the brakes for solar by undermining this key policy or adding new fees and charges on solar customers. This comes at a time when federal incentives for solar are set to expire at the end of next year, while fossil fuel subsidies remain in place. These types of policy changes could hold back the spread of clean, locally produced energy.”

In many places, the solar market has also been affected by fixed-charge increases. Last quarter, 26 utilities in 18 states had ongoing or decided rate cases in which the utility proposed to increase customers’ fixed charges by at least 10 percent. The average fixed-charge increase in these 26 instances was 70 percent.

“In general, fixed charges that apply to all residential customers are a blunt instrument,” said Inskeep. “While it’s understandable for the utility to want to guarantee some revenue, [fixed charges] can be regressive in terms of harming low-income users that tend to be lower energy users, while also disincentivizing solar and efficiency.”

Fourteen utilities in 10 states (some of which have also proposed fixed-charge increases) had pending or decided proposals for adding new charges specifically on net-metered solar customers last quarter. That number rose from six utilities in five states in the second quarter.

Many of these utilities have proposed rate structures that subject residential solar customers to demand charges, which are based on peak energy usage over a billing period. As of Q3, states with pending utility proposals for new residential demand charges include Arizona, California, Kansas, Oklahoma and Texas.

“Utilities are waking up to the potential threat that distributed solar has on their existing business model,” said Inskeep. The responses to date have been varied, which has led to “a mess” of solar policies around the county.

In addition to restructuring policies, some utilities are adapting by getting into the solar business. In the third quarter, utilities in Arizona, Georgia and Texas developed programs to own or operate distributed PV assets. In New York, Con Edison proposed a residential solar and storage program as one of its demonstration projects under the REV proceeding. The system would be owned and operated by Con Ed’s unregulated subsidiary.

Inskeep acknowledged that it’s difficult to come up with the perfect solar policy, in part because each solar market is different and so the policies need to be localized. The concern is that with so many regulatory and legislative changes in the works, it will become increasingly difficult for potential solar customers to move forward.

One of the best opportunities to support a strong solar industry into the future is to create a value-of-solar tariff or a successor tariff for net metering that fairly accounts for all of the benefits solar can provide, said Inskeep. 

“I’m hopeful that these discussions will be transparent and will fairly account for the full list of benefits that come with distributed solar,” he said. “It’s easy to strive for a good value of solar, but in practice, the devil’s in the details.”

The "50 States of Solar" report was produced in partnership with Meister Consultants Group.

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