San Diego Union-Tribune

STATE BACKTRACKI­NG ON ROOFTOP SOLAR REQUIREMEN­T, CRITICS SAY

Energy Commission gives Sacramento-area developers exemption from mandate for new homes

- BY SAMMY ROTH

California officials voted Thursday to allow Sacramento-area developers to build homes that don’t come equipped with solar panels — a move solar installers and environmen­talists said would undermine the state’s first-in-the-nation home solar requiremen­t.

Under the proposal from Sacramento Municipal Utility District, a public power agency, homebuilde­rs will be able to take credit for electricit­y generated by off-site solar farms, instead of constructi­ng houses with rooftop solar panels. The utility plans to make enough off-site solar power available to serve all demand from new residentia­l constructi­on.

Supporters said the “community solar” program would accomplish California’s goal of boosting clean energy, and reducing the carbon emissions fueling the climate crisis, without pushing up home prices in a state facing rising homelessne­ss and a shortage of affordable housing.

Critics countered that the whole point of the rooftop solar mandate, approved in 2018, was to make clean energy a standard feature of new homes. They said the alternate compliance option approved Thursday would result in significan­tly lower electricit­y cost savings for homeowners and would lay the groundwork for other utilities to create similar workaround­s.

The debate pitted homebuilde­rs, utilities and organized labor against the solar industry and environmen­tal advocacy groups. State Sen. Scott Wiener, D-san Francisco, weighed in to support rooftop solar, but his voice was drowned out by 31 other state lawmakers who signed a letter urging approval of the Sacramento-area program.

After initially postponing a decision in November, the Energy Commission sided with Sacramento Municipal Utility District, known as SMUD, in a unanimous vote on a revamped proposal.

“If it is true that it’s a much better deal for consumers to have a panel on the roof, then those are the houses that will sell. And builders know that,” Commission­er Karen Douglas said before the vote.

 ?? IRFAN KHAN LOS ANGELES TIMES FILE ?? State officials on Thursday voted to allow an exemption to the requiremen­t of rooftop solar panels on new homes in Sacramento.
IRFAN KHAN LOS ANGELES TIMES FILE State officials on Thursday voted to allow an exemption to the requiremen­t of rooftop solar panels on new homes in Sacramento.

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