Los Angeles Times

Utilities push solar pricing plan

The proposal is more expensive for solar users but more fair for others, companies say.

- By I van Penn

Southern California Edison, San Diego Gas & Electric and Pacific Gas & Electric are pushing back against a regulator proposal for new rules on compensati­ng California homeowners and businesses for the solar power they produce.

The three investorow­ned utilities have united in an unusual counterpro­posal that would be less generous to solar- panel owners than the plan that the California Public Utilities Commission is set to vote on next week.

The utilities maintain that electricit­y customers will continue to shoulder an undue f inancial burden if the PUC approves the proposed new rules on the compensati­on system, known as net- energy metering. In regulatory f ilings and a news release, Edison said the utilities see the need for “a more sustainabl­e future for all customers,” not just those with solar.

The PUC plan involves connection and usage fees for new solar power users. In addition, utilities would place new solar customers on time- of- use rates, which rise during periods of high electricit­y demand.

In response, the utilities

have proposed a fixed rate of compensati­on that is lower than both the current system and the proposed PUC plan.

Currently, a solar home generating 1,000 kilowattho­urs of electricit­y a month would be credited on a dollar- for- dollar basis up to 1,000 kilowatt- hours of use. Excess power is sold to the utility at wholesale prices.

Edison did not have any f igures immediatel­y available that showed the impact of the utilities’ proposal on solar owners.

“We still go back to the fairness argument, fairness for all of the customers in our service territory,” said Robert Laffoon- Villegas, an Edison spokesman.

But at a meeting Wednesday at the PUC’s San Francisco headquarte­rs, the utilities’ proposal was criticized as harmful by the solar industry and its proponents.

“Simply, this proposal would gut [ net- energy metering], add complexity and deter customer solar,” said Mark Ferron, a former com- missioner who said he was speaking as a citizen on behalf of solar. “I urge you to just disregard it.”

Compton City Councilman Isaac Galvan also traveled to San Francisco to defend strong compensati­on rules that encourage solar power at homes and businesses.

“We have [ government] funds and we allocate a portion of it each year so families can put solar on their roofs,” Galvan said during an interview. “The need is there for our community. I’m a low- income person myself, and I see the benefit.”

Those who backed solar also said the utilities’ move was a violation of protocol as the proposal came after the opportunit­y for submitting such informatio­n to the record had closed.

Under the proposed PUC plan set for vote next week, new solar customers would face a one- time fee for connection to the electric grid. The commission estimates that the fee would range from $ 75 to $ 150 per solar customer.

In addition, rooftop solar customers would pay a fee of 2 cents to 3 cents per kilowatt- hour for electricit­y used from the utility companies, no matter how much power their solar systems generate. This fee would amount to about $ 5 a month for the average solar user.

Current solar owners would be grandfathe­red in for 20 years after their systems were installed.

“To go any further south toward the utilities would kill the solar industry,” said Bernadette Del Chiaro, executive director of the California Solar Industries Assn.

Walker Wright, policy director for Sunrun, the nation’s largest residentia­l solar company, said he believes the utilities simply haven’t accepted that solar owners are a f ixture in the electricit­y industry now.

“Rooftop solar,” Wright said, “represents the f irst true form of competitio­n that the utilities have faced.”

 ?? Anne Cusack
Los Angeles Times ?? THE UTILITIES have proposed a f ixed rate of compensati­on for solar panel owners that is lower than both the current system and the proposed PUC plan.
Anne Cusack Los Angeles Times THE UTILITIES have proposed a f ixed rate of compensati­on for solar panel owners that is lower than both the current system and the proposed PUC plan.

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