Sun Sentinel Broward Edition

Electric utility companies should turn to rooftop solar

- By Michael Cohen Michael Cohen is the co-founder of Solar United Neighbors of Florida.

It is time for electric utilities to reinvent themselves with a new business model: owning rooftop solar rather than solar farms.

Telephone companies reinvented themselves in the last couple of decades when mobile phones wiped out the pay phone and most residentia­l landline business. The electric industry must adapt in the same way. Distributi­ng power in the form of rooftop and community solar, coupled with batteries, should provide a considerab­le portion of our energy needs.

Homes, apartments, condominiu­ms, schools, churches, warehouses and retail stores could have solar on their roofs and batteries on the wall. Parking lots could be covered with solar to provide power, shade cars and charge electric vehicles; lakes and retention ponds could have floating areas of community solar for those that can’t have rooftop solar.

Utilities understand that they must move to renewable energy because of climate change and economics.

Solar is more affordable than fossil fuel in the long term. This is a giant leap, but utilities are still wed to the industrial concept of the last century. Their model is to have centralize­d power production controlled by utilities with large transmissi­on lines moving the power to cities and distributi­on lines crisscross­ing the network of end users.

We should applaud the Orlando Utilities Commission for planning to go “Net Zero” by 2050 in their adopted Electric

Integrated Resource Plan (EIRP).

The plan, developed by Siemens, estimates that providing enough power would “require 50,000 acres of land or, for scale and context, approximat­ely 69% of the land area of the city of Orlando,” If Orlando is a model for the rest of Florida, almost all rural land in Florida will be solar farms.

This would also mean that many thousands of miles of new electric transmissi­on lines will crisscross Florida on new rightsof-way. These are the huge metal structures that nobody wants near their home and are potential hazards during hurricanes.

Do you remember Joni Mitchell’s 1970 song “Big Yellow Taxi,” in which the first line was, “They paved paradise and put up a parking lot”? Well, change the parking lot to a solar farm.

Florida utilities recognized they need huge areas of land and got the Legislatur­e to pass and the governor to sign a renewable energy bill that requires solar facilities to be a permitted use in all agricultur­al land-use categories in a local government’s comprehens­ive plan and all agricultur­al zoning districts within an unincorpor­ated area. The law means that citizens or local government cannot prohibit solar farms in rural or agricultur­al areas.

Solar United Neighbors of Florida, a nonprofit, facilitate­d 2,000 homeowners who collective­ly added 20 megawatts of solar power in five years via 70 co-ops. Through the co-ops, homeowners and businesses pay for solar and batteries to be installed on their property. Federal tax credits encourage people to add solar and batteries; nonprofits should have access to rebates similar to the tax credits. This however, will still be a small fraction of the potential for rooftop solar in Florida.

Rooftop solar should not put electric utilities out of business. So how are utilities going to make money? They would own the solar on most of the roofs and batteries on walls, in parking lots, on lakes and retention ponds and sell electricit­y to their customers just like they do now.

Because the supply of electricit­y will be close to the consumer, there will be less need for big transmissi­on lines and huge solar farms. Having solar and batteries distribute­d throughout the service territory will limit outages from hurricanes. Intermitte­nt clouds that are a problem for large solar farms will be mitigated by the disburseme­nt of solar.

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