Image credit: Vladimir Kostka at flickr under a creative commons license.
The “net metering” battle reached epic proportions last year. One one side: the solar industry and overwhelming public support. On the other: utility companies claiming that net metering poses an unreasonable expense that they are forced to pass onto their customers.
Image credit: USFWS Mountain-Prarie at flickr using a creative commons license.
For those who don’t know: net metering is program that sends excess electricity generated by home solar arrays back into the grid, supplying other homes with electricity and allowing utility companies to reduce their output—all from power that would otherwise be wasted.
Last year’s political drama took across Arizona, California, Louisiana, and Idaho. The result: conservative mega-fund ALEC and Big Utility went 0 for 4, spending millions and losing customer support in the process.
However, Rocky Mountain Power (RMP), Utah’s largest utility, is close to securing legal permission to add a $4.25 fee to every net metered home. According to the Salt Lake Tribune, RMP is nervous that net metering will eat into a greater share of its profits in the coming years:
“Currently about 2,700 RMP customers have solar arrays, but the number is growing by 30 percent a year thanks to improved and cheaper technologies and state and federal tax credits that can cut the cost by 40 to 50 percent.”
RMP cites the lack of an additional “facilities charge” as an important factor in its controversial 4% rate hike last January. Currently, the Utah Public Service Commission is weighing its decision, while consumer groups such as the Sierra Club and the newly formed Utah Citizens Advocating Renewable Energy insist that RMP saved over $1.4 million benefiting from net metering and is acting unfairly. A decision is expected next month.
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