The Day

Solar tariff sparks fears

Regulators release new energy strategy

- By BENJAMIN KAIL Day Staff Writer

Solar installer Mark Waldo isn’t panicking.

A longtime electricia­n who started Waldo Renewable Electric in Old Saybrook with his wife, Rebecca, about 12 years ago, Waldo says there are too many unknowns about a recently announced tariff on imported solar cells to believe it will do lasting damage to an industry that’s steadily grown in Connecticu­t.

“I don’t take it too personal,” Waldo said of the tariff. “The industry is strong because solar works.”

President Donald Trump, who has pushed for increased manufactur­ing, recently approved a 30 percent tariff on most imported solar cells following a recommenda­tion from the U.S. Internatio­nal Trade Commission in October. The ITC unanimousl­y found that an oversupply of imported solar materials, especially from China, had forced dozens of U.S. manufactur­ers out of business in the last few years.

Industry analysts expect the tariff to hike project costs by about 10 cents per watt, an amount that’s particular­ly concerning for some developers of large-scale projects. Trade groups and renewable energy advocates have fumed about the tariff for months, arguing it will hike solar prices, forcing demand to nosedive and jobs to disappear.

“Connecticu­t stands to lose 342 jobs due to the tariff,” said Alexandra Hobson of the Solar Energy Industries Associatio­n (SEIA), a trade group.

SEIA calls Connecticu­t “one of the fastest growing of the smaller states in the solar industry.” Connecticu­t is home to 187 solar companies employing 2,100 installers, manufactur­ers, consultant­s and developers.

SEIA expects tariff-related price increases to lead to the eliminatio­n

of almost 1,500 jobs throughout New England and at least 23,000 nationwide.

But Waldo said for smallscale installers and homeowners, the impacts of the tariff may not be as dire as predicted. The bigger downfall, he said, could be customer confidence shaken by uncertaint­y and politics.

“While everybody’s up in arms, there’s an unknown number of customers who would buy solar but are waiting for this to die down or don’t know what the costs are,” Waldo said. “We’ve worked really hard to create customer confidence and stability. (The industry) has proven itself.”

Made in China

Solar World and Suniva Inc., contending imports had hurt their business in the United States, filed petitions last year seeking the tariff, which declines by 5 percent annually before phasing out after four years.

Solar World’s corporate headquarte­rs are in Germany. China-based Shunfeng Internatio­nal Clean Energy owns a majority stake in Suniva.

The influx of cheaper foreign materials — spurred in part by China’s aggressive subsidizat­ion of manufactur­ing, per the ITC — led to sharp price drops for U.S. solar companies and customers in the last several years.

Solar prices in Connecticu­t have dropped by 55 percent over the last five years, according to SEIA.

Demand continues to rise as installati­on costs have dipped from at least $5 per watt to close to $3.50 per watt, according to Bryan Garcia, president and CEO of the Connecticu­t Green Bank.

“Back in 2012, the state was deploying maybe three or four megawatts of residentia­l solar,” Garcia said on Thursday. “We’re now doing 40 to 50 megawatts a year.”

The Green Bank is a statefunde­d organizati­on that spurs private investment and helps customers finance solar installati­ons and other energy improvemen­ts.

Data tracked by the Green Bank shows 60 percent of the panels installed through the bank’s program since 2012 were made in China. That’s 400,772 panels out of the 665,488 installed in 23,000 Green Bank projects over the last five years. About 107,000 panels came from Korea, while 51,609 were made in the U.S.

Last year, however, Green Bank’s partner companies installed 13 percent fewer panels made in China. Garcia said it’s possible developers already started to shift to other options while the tariff was under considerat­ion.

Garcia argued residents wouldn’t be hit too hard by the tariff, as the average install price will rise from about $3.50 per watt to $3.60 per watt. For a typical 5 kilowatt system, the project price might rise from about $17,500 to $18,000, before tax rebates and other incentives.

But Garcia said the tariff significan­tly could impact commercial and industrial systems, where install costs are about $2 per watt but substantia­lly more wattage is needed.

‘Every landfill in Connecticu­t should be its own power plant’

James DeSantos, vice president of Middletown solar company Greenskies, described the tariff as “very, very shortsight­ed” because it could halt growth by forcing companies to cut back on projects.

“It will affect everybody’s bottom line and ability to hire,” DeSantos said. “There’s no doubt about it.”

Founded in 2008, Greenskies is an internatio­nal commercial and industrial solar developer purchased by California-based Clean Focus last year.

The company has six projects slated for southeaste­rn Connecticu­t this summer, but is holding off on new hires.

DeSantos says the best way to combat the tariff is with progressiv­e state actions.

The Connecticu­t Fund for the Environmen­t is pushing for greater use of shared or “community solar” projects in landfills, Brownfield sites or cleared industrial parcels that can bring solar power to customers who can’t access it because they own homes in shaded areas or rent apartments.

“Every landfill in Connecticu­t should be its own power plant,” DeSantos said. “Wind, solar, fuel cells, battery. I’d love to see that.”

Previous pilot programs for shared solar have fallen through or stalled. The state Department of Energy & Environmen­tal Protection selected three pilot projects last year, each between 1.6 and 2 megawatts, that should be operationa­l by next year in Shelton, Bloomfield and Thompson.

New energy strategy

While tariff talk dominated solar news in recent weeks, DEEP on Thursday night released updates to the state’s Comprehens­ive Energy Strategy. The plan commits to a 45 percent reduction from 1990s levels of carbon emissions by 2030 and calls for a host of new renewable energy initiative­s.

But some advocates and companies fear DEEP’s proposed method to transition from net metering could minimize incentives for solar customers.

Net metering lets residentia­l customers receive energy bill credits from utilities, compensati­ng them at full retail rates for excess energy their solar panels feed into the grid.

DEEP says net metering is unsustaina­ble because it’s directly tied to retail rates. Over time, solar customers will receive higher compensati­on levels, yet non-solar ratepayers are the ones largely footing the bill through continuall­y increasing rates, regulators say.

“When designing programs, policymake­rs consider the costs of programs ... from the perspectiv­e of all ratepayers, not just the program participan­ts,” DEEP wrote in the CES.

The Acadia Center and 20 other organizati­ons and advocates wrote to DEEP on Dec. 22 to argue the proposed changes would lead to higher metering and billing costs and imperiled “the future of smart homes with storage and energy management.”

“Everything you’re generating on-site should be credited at the retail rate,” Emily Lewis O’Brien, a policy analyst with Acadia Center, said last week.

But DEEP says future solar customers should be credited “a fixed amount on a centsper-kilowatt hour basis for each kilowatt hour produced to receive savings on their electric bill.”

A competitiv­e bidding process among utilities, structured by the Public Utilities Regulatory Authority, will establish the fixed amount residentia­l solar customers will receive. Regulators say the fixed price will represent a fairer, more accurate value for customers’ solar generation and its carbon emission avoidance and grid reliabilit­y, as opposed to an amount susceptibl­e to fluctuatio­ns in retail rates.

A bill from Gov. Dannel P. Malloy under review by the Energy and Technology Committee calls on PURA to establish a bidding plan by Sept. 1, 2018.

Mary Sotos, DEEP deputy commission­er, said Friday the agency “definitely (wants) to allay” fears that residents, businesses or municipali­ties won’t be adequately compensate­d for their solar power generation moving forward.

She notes the new rules and rates will apply to new installati­ons. Existing projects will be grandfathe­red and keep the same metering systems for residentia­l, state, municipal or agricultur­al projects for up to 20 years from their in-service date.

DEEP is calling on utilities to annually spend $35 million spread evenly among residentia­l solar projects; competing zero-emission renewable projects; and competing low-emission renewable projects. The latter two include commercial, industrial and shared solar developmen­ts and state, municipal and agricultur­al efforts; this system replaces the expiring low- and zero-emission renewable energy credit programs (LREC and ZREC) that gave a boost to large-scale projects the last few years.

United Illuminati­ng and Eversource said they back the proposed changes.

Waldo, the solar installer, said he is worried about the rate of return for customers in the potential new system. But he’s confident solar and renewables are sustainabl­e, which is why he and his wife got into the business years ago.

“I feel like we’re trying to do our part to make a better planet for our kids,” he said. “Logically it’s the right thing to do. And we’re making a living doing it.”

“While everybody’s up in arms, there’s an unknown number of customers who would buy solar but are waiting for this to die down or don’t know what the costs are. We’ve worked really hard to create customer confidence and stability. (The industry) has proven itself.” MARK WALDO, SOLAR INSTALLER OUT OF OLD SAYBROOK

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