The New Zealand Herald

Power authority agrees to hear solar fee complaint

- — Newstalk ZB

The battle of what’s being touted as a tax on the sun is heating up as an independen­t appeals authority prepares to review an Electricit­y Authority decision.

The Electricit­y Rulings Panel has announced it will hold a full hearing to determine if Unison’s added fee on its solar customers is legal.

A fee was introduced in April last year for customers using renewable energy of the sun — the country’s first tariff on solar energy.

In May solarcity made a formal complaint to the Electricit­y Authority alleging the new tariff breached the Electricit­y Industry Participat­ion Code because it charges over and above the cost of the services provided by distribute­d generators.

But the EA decided not to take any further action because it was not charging over and above the distribute­d generators, it was charging a retail consumer tariff to steady the market.

The authority was concerned about the stability of the market, and that every consumer should pay for their fair share of the electricit­y grid.

But Solar City hasn’t backed down, and laid a formal complaint with the Electricit­y Rulings Panel on September 6 last year.

Yesterday, the panel decided to go ahead with that hearing to “fully test” the tariffs. The panel also rejected a request from Unison to disallow a hearing.

Greenpeace campaigner Amanda Larsson said they’re pleased the Rulings Panel has decided the case deserves a full hearing.

“It’s good news for all the households and communitie­s using solar panels to cut power bills and pollution.”

Larsson said they’re very hopeful that the Rulings Panel will rule Unison cannot implement the tax.

“We’re hopeful [all the other lines companies will get the message] that this kind of un- fair taxation of solar households is unjustifie­d.”

Larsson said families should be able to produce their own electricit­y and it’s not their fault power companies haven’t prepared for the technology.

“The electricit­y industry needs to adapt fast. For some companies, like Unison, the knee-jerk reaction has been to slap a fee on solar while they work out how to deal with it.”

Greenpeace said the solarcity complaint is one of three lodged with the EA and a petition asking the EA to stop Unison and other lines companies from doing the same has passed 79,000 signatures.

“The outcome of this Electricit­y Rulings Panel hearing . . . will shed light on whether the electricit­y system exists fundamenta­lly to help households get clean, affordable energy or simply to make big profits for energy company CEOs.”

A date for the Electricit­y Rulings Panel hearing is yet to be set.

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