The Oneida Daily Dispatch (Oneida, NY)
State to pay residents for hosting wind or solar farms
NEW YORK » The New York State Public Service Commission (Commission) recently approved a Host Community Benefit Program that provides bill credits directly to residential electric customers in municipalities in which major renewable energy facilities are located thus incentivizing more clean energy projects to be developed across the state to support the combatting of climate change.
The program will provide bill credits that vary based on the size and type of the renewable energy facility.
“To ensure host communities benefit more fully from the development of renewable energy projects, developers will now be required to fund bill credits for local electric customers,” Commission Chair John B. Rhodes said.
“This first-of-its-kind program will provide direct benefits to residents, while keeping in place negotiated communitywide benefits, such as Payments in Lieu of Taxes and host community agreements,” Rhodes added.
The program will provide an annual bill credit to residential electric utility customers within a city or town where newly constructed facilities 25 MWS or greater are sited for the first 10 years a facility is operational.
The amount of the credit would correlate to the type and size of the facility. Solar and wind project developers would be required to pay an annual fee of $500/MW and $1,000/ MW of nameplate capacity, respectively. As a result, a 50 MW solar farm would provide annual customer credits totaling $25,000, and a 100 MW wind farm would provide annual customer credits totaling $100,000. The money would be shared by all residential customers in the host municipality, regardless of proximity to the facility.
Facility owners would pay the annual fee to the utility serving the affected municipalities. Utilities would then apply a bill credit to eligible customers’ accounts. Additionally, utilities would annually report the following: facilities actively providing benefits under the program in its service territory; monies received from each facility; the amount of the individual bill credit and the number of customers who received the bill credit for each facility; and the costs to administer the program.
The credit will be paid by any new renewable energy project greater than 25 MW that goes into service after the effective date of the Accelerated Renewable Energy Growth and Community Benefit Act, which was April 2020. The Host Community Benefit Program received strong support from stakeholders participating in the review, including many local elected officials.