Vancouver Sun

Cutting surplus payments like ‘stealing’: homeowner

- SUSAN LAZARUK

Bonnie Zentner, who has covered part of the roof of her Surrey house with solar panels to reduce her electricit­y bill, is throwing shade at B.C. Hydro’s plan to scale back surplus payments to some excess power producers.

“That is just so wrong,” said Zentner, of the proposed change to the “net metering ” program that would reduce payments to homeowners or businesses with their own power generators who create a lot more power than they use.

“If you don’t pay a credit for something that the customer created, then it’s like you’re stealing it,” said Zentner. “It’s like drilling a hole in my gas tank and helping yourself to my gas.”

But B.C. Hydro said the change is necessary because a small percentage of the net metering customers are pocketing as much as $60,000 a year in cashback for unused electricit­y, which it said isn’t the program’s intent.

B.C. Hydro spokeswoma­n Tanya Fish said the company has gone to the B.C. Utilities Commission to amend the program so that it’s not available to people who install their own power-production units when the production is far greater than what that household normally uses. Existing participan­ts in the program will not be impacted and those producing a small amount of excess power will still get a credit.

Customers since 2004 can carry over electricit­y they generated but didn’t consume to months when they need it. At the end of each year, B.C. Hydro would pay the customers for the excess, at almost 10 cents a kilowatt hour (kWh).

Zentner — who spent $1,000 per panel for the 18 panels she had installed last fall and has already seen a $144 reduction in her bill for the last two-month billing period compared to last year — said B.C. Hydro didn’t pay for or subsidize installati­on and shouldn’t get any extra energy for free.

“It’s my renewable energy because I created it,” she said. “It would be different if they paid for the solar panels. To me, that’s stealing from me, because it’s mine.”

She said the new rules force customers to donate excess electricit­y to B.C. Hydro, who can then sell it to other customers and profit by it.

“It’s not like I can divert it somewhere to store it,” she said.

She and other existing customers are exempt and will still receive rebates, but Zentner said she still opposes cutting rebates for others because it removes an incentive for people to adopt green energy. She said she was going to encourage her mother to install panels on her house but “I’m not sure I will now.”

Zentner doesn’t expect to generate more power than she uses, but hopes to trim her electricit­y costs by $1,000 a year, which over the years will pay down the installati­on cost and reduce her environmen­tal footprint.

She said she’s not opposed to some customers creating power to make money.

“Why can’t somebody be able to profit from this? Why is it just B.C. Hydro that can profit?”

Fish said the company had recently seen an increase in the number of net-metering applicatio­ns from run-of-creek hydroelect­ric projects — some producing 40-50 times the electricit­y needed for their homes.

“Large generation size for a residentia­l customer results in significan­t annual surplus payments of approximat­ely $40,000 to $60,000,” Fish said. “It’s significan­t enough for us to want to put an end to it.”

Last year, 230 customers out of the program’s 1,330 members were paid for their surplus power.

Of those, six were paid a total of $220,000, between $10,000 and $60,000 each by running small run-of-creek hydroelect­ric projects, she said.

Net metering “was never intended to facilitate excess generation on a consistent basis,” said Fish

The average home uses 11,000 kWhs of power a year.

A typical solar power setup has 16 panels on a residentia­l roof to create 4,400 kWh of electricit­y a year.

Homeowners who install solar power are aiming for a net-zero hydro bill, but are restricted by the amount of roof space for panels, said Scott Fleenor of Terratek, a Vancouver-based company that installs solar panels.

 ?? GERRY KAHRMANN ?? Ron and Bonnie Zentner installed 18 solar panels on their roof. They say B.C. Hydro has no right to the power those panels generate.
GERRY KAHRMANN Ron and Bonnie Zentner installed 18 solar panels on their roof. They say B.C. Hydro has no right to the power those panels generate.
 ?? GERRY KAHRMANN ?? Bonnie Zentner points to the meter that monitors electricit­y generated by the solar panels on her roof. She says she spent $18,000 to install the panels, and since B.C. Hydro didn’t pay for them or subsidize the installati­on, the Crown corporatio­n...
GERRY KAHRMANN Bonnie Zentner points to the meter that monitors electricit­y generated by the solar panels on her roof. She says she spent $18,000 to install the panels, and since B.C. Hydro didn’t pay for them or subsidize the installati­on, the Crown corporatio­n...

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