Los Angeles Times (Sunday)

Rooftop solar effort must evolve

- MICHAEL HILTZIK Keep up to date with Michael Hiltzik. Follow @hiltzikm on Twitter, see his Facebook page or email michael.hiltzik @latimes.com.

There’s one aspect of California’s program to spur the installati­on of rooftop solar panels that everyone can agree on: It has been spectacula­rly successful.

Launched in 1995 and pushed forward a decade later, when then-Gov. Arnold Schwarzene­gger set a target of 1 million solar installati­ons, the program has handily exceeded that goal.

Today there are more than 1.2 million rooftop systems in place, most of them atop residentia­l buildings. That has made California — where an estimated 15% of electric generation comes from rooftop systems — the national leader in the technology.

But now the program is showing its age. It has been so successful, in fact, that some of its unintended consequenc­es have become too significan­t to ignore.

Chief among them is that the incentives awarded to homeowners installing rooftop solar systems have raised costs on consumers who haven’t joined the trend — or can’t. These include renters and lower-income families.

“California’s distribute­d solar policy hurts the poor,” UC Berkeley energy economist Severin Borenstein observed last June. “It really is that simple.”

Enter the California Public Utilities Commission, which on Dec. 13 proposed a sheaf of changes to the state’s incentive program, aimed at addressing its embedded inequities.

Among other features, the PUC’s plan would impose a monthly charge of $8 per kilowatt on rooftop solar installati­ons. That would come to about $56 a month for the average system in Southern California Edison’s zone in Southern California, and about $48 for the average system in Pacific Gas & Electric’s Northern California region.

The PUC would also slash the so-called net metering incentives enjoyed by rooftop solar customers. Under net metering, the utilities pay those customers for the excess electricit­y their home systems generate and transmit to the utilities’ grid.

That’s the key to the reductions those customers see on their electric bills. But it has long been clear that the net metering paybacks are overly generous, even lavish. The PUC proposes to cut those subsidies by more than 80%.

The PUC’s proposal predictabl­y triggered an uproar.

One solar industry lobbyist called the proposal a “clean energy and jobs disaster.” An advocate of renewable energy accused the big utilities of plotting to cripple rooftop solar so they can protect their profits.

In an op-ed earlier this month, Schwarzene­gger called the PUC’s monthly fee proposal a “solar tax” and implied that the proposal is a sop to the big utilities.

Schwarzene­gger’s assertions contradict­ed his position in 2019, when he celebrated the state’s onemillion­th rooftop installati­on by telling my colleague Sammy Roth that the price of solar had come down so much that “now we don’t need any more subsidies.”

The solar industry and some of its customers have become, in effect, addicted to those subsidies, treating them as their right. They assert that reducing the incentives could stifle rooftop solar growth, though the degree to which that may happen is subject to debate.

The energy consulting firm Wood Mackenzie on Wednesday projected that the proposal could cut the market for residentia­l solar in half by 2024.

The firm said the proposal would stretch the payback period — the time it takes for the savings from rooftop solar to cover the systems’ upfront costs — to as long as 15 years from the current range of five to six years. That’s enough to discourage many homeowners from making the investment.

The PUC, however, says its proposal is structured so that new solar installati­ons, when paired with batteries, would be paid back in less than 10 years.

But Wood Mackenzie also projected that the market would start to recover in 2025, assisted by continuing price declines in solar and storage equipment.

There can hardly be any question that the benefits of the rooftop solar revolution have been inequitabl­y shared. That’s because of two main flaws in the program.

One is that solar customers avoid paying for the vast majority of costs of operating and maintainin­g the state’s overall electrical grid. That’s because their electric bills are based on only the amount of power they consume from the utilities — much less than do non-solar households.

The PUC estimated that rooftop solar customers cover only 9% to 18% of costs such as wildfire mitigation, compensati­on for wildfire victims and routine maintenanc­e, depending on their utility provider. The balance is shouldered by nonrooftop customers. As that segment shrinks, their burden rises. The PUC’s Public Advocates Office estimates the shifted cost at $3.37 billion in 2021, though other stakeholde­rs contend that figure is lower.

The other flaw is that the payments received by solar customers for their excess electricit­y are much higher than the electricit­y is really worth.

“Solar customers in California are now paid up to six times what electricit­y generated by solar panels is worth to the grid and to reduce carbon,” a study by the Natural Resources Defense Council — an advocate of solar generation — reported last year. The reason is that net metering payments are based on the price of the electricit­y charged by utilities, not the marginal value of the electricit­y that solar customers return to the grid.

Another factor contributi­ng to inequities in the program is the natural phenomenon that the advent of new technologi­es initially favors the affluent. They’re the people with the disposable capital to invest in untested innovation­s as well as the mind-set to try something new; they’re more likely to respond to financial incentives, too.

The risk is that low- and middle-income people eventually get left behind. This happened most recently with the rollout of electric cars: A 2016 study from UC Berkeley found that 83% of the recipients of state rebates for electric and hybrid vehicles reported incomes over $100,000.

Rooftop solar expansion shows the same economic mismatch, because it lends itself to installati­on on owner-occupied singlefami­ly homes.

As a result, according to a study by Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory cited by the PUC, only about 13% of net metering customers come from the lowest 40% of households by income, while 43% come from the top 20% of income earners.

The Berkeley Lab also pinpointed a racial aspect of the economic discrepanc­y. “Solar-adopters tend to live in neighborho­ods with relatively high non-Hispanic White and Asian population­s, and with relatively low Hispanic and Black population­s,” the lab found.

As Borenstein and his colleagues observe, the shift of electrical costs to a shrinking base of lower- and middle-income households will force the latter’s power costs to rise, which can only “discourage some households from considerin­g electrific­ation of space heating, water heating, clothes drying, vehicle transporta­tion and other services that can switch between energy sources.” That wouldn’t be good for California’s transition away from fossil fuels.

What does all this mean for the future of California’s solar rollout?

One imperative is to acknowledg­e the program’s evident flaws. Even the Sierra Club and the Natural Resources Defense Council, strong supporters of solar power, agree that the program’s inequities need to be addressed. (The Sierra Club, however, contends that elements of the PUC’s proposal are too extreme and possibly illegal, and their planned implementa­tion so abrupt that they would “devastate” the California solar industry.)

So, too, do leading consumer advocates such as the Utility Reform Network and the PUC’s Public Advocates Office, which both submitted their own proposals for reform of the net metering program.

It’s important to clear away some of the obfuscatio­n clouding the debate. Solar industry advocates assert, for instance, that low-income residents already benefit from rooftop solar because it makes the overall electric grid less dependent on fossil fuels that contribute to global warming.

That’s misleading, however. Many of the calculatio­ns showing economic inequities in the solar rollout already account for how the benefits of rooftop solar flow to nonpartici­pating customers.

The alternativ­e to rooftop solar isn’t more fossil fuel-burning plants but large-scale solar and wind farms, which present ecological challenges but also can be economical­ly more efficient than smallscale rooftop generation.

It’s true that rooftop solar has been penetratin­g low-income neighborho­ods, but only slowly.

“You’re kidding yourself if you believe working-class communitie­s currently have any kind of substantia­l rooftop solar,” former Assemblywo­man Lorena Gonzalez Fletcher (D-San Diego) remarked recently on Twitter. “They’re simply paying for others’ subsidies.”

Inevitably, the PUC’s current proposal almost certainly won’t be the last word on the future of net metering and rooftop solar in California. Almost certainly, the details proposed by the PUC, including its monthly charge and the price that residents get for their excess power, will be the subjects of compromise.

An alternativ­e proposal may emerge from within the commission, and Gov. Gavin Newsom already has indicated that further discussion is warranted. Portraying the PUC plan as an all-or-nothing choice won’t get the state any closer to a resolution.

All that’s clear is that the rooftop solar program needs to evolve. Let’s hope that California­ns are clearsight­ed enough to conduct the debate on the merits.

 ?? Tomas Ovalle For The Times ?? FORMER GOVS. Jerry Brown, left, and Arnold Schwarzene­gger celebrate achieving 1 million rooftop solar installati­ons across California in 2019.
Tomas Ovalle For The Times FORMER GOVS. Jerry Brown, left, and Arnold Schwarzene­gger celebrate achieving 1 million rooftop solar installati­ons across California in 2019.
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