January 7, 2011

Top 10 in ’10: DSIRE’s picks for notable state incentive & rebate policies

Despite the sluggishness of FITs and the belly flop of PACE programs, 2010 was still a robust year — once again — for renewable energy policy at the state and local levels, especially with respect to net metering, interconnection standards and RPS policies. The DSIRE team, which scours the U.S. high and low for new policy…

Despite the sluggishness of FITs and the belly flop of PACE programs, 2010 was still a robust year — once again — for renewable energy policy at the state and local levels, especially with respect to net metering, interconnection standards and RPS policies. The DSIRE team, which scours the U.S. high and low for new policy developments, has compiled a Top 10 in ’10 list that summarizes the most significant developments of last year.  We present it here, for your reading pleasure.


CALIFORNIANew Law Raises Roof for Net Metering
After running out time at the end of the 2009 session to increase the aggregate capacity of net metering, the California State Legislature fast-tracked Assembly Bill 510 at the start of the 2010 session. This bill, enacted at the end of February, raises the aggregate cap on net metering from 2.5% to 5.0%.

COLORADO – RPS Super-Sized
New legislation enacted in Colorado increased and revised the state’s renewable energy requirements for investor-owned utilities. Xcel Energy and Black Hills Energy, formerly required to use 20% renewable energy by 2020, now must use renewable energy to account for 30% of their electricity sales by 2020.  The legislation also changed the state’s existing 0.8% solar carve-out to a 3% distributed generation carve-out, half of which must come from “retail distributed generation” serving on-site load.

COLORADO – New Law Sows Bed for Solar Gardens
Colorado enacted legislation in June that allows community net metering (“solar gardens”) in the service territory of investor-owned utilities. PV systems up to 2 MW that have at least 10 subscribers are generally eligible. Each subscriber will receive kWh credits on his or her utility bill in an amount equal to the proportion of shares he or she has in the project. The Colorado Public Utilities Commission will begin a rulemaking process by October 1, 2010, to develop rules for the program.

FLORIDA – Sun Sets on Multiple Renewables Incentives
On June 30, 2010, four separate Florida incentives for renewable energy expired:  the Solar Energy Incentives Program, the Renewable Energy Production Tax Credit, the Renewable Energy Technologies Investment Tax Credit, and the Renewable Energy Equipment Sales Tax Exemption. The solar rebate program has been out of funding for months and will finally officially close, as was not reauthorized by the Florida Legislature.

HAWAII – Feed-in Tariff Debuts
Hawaii’s feed-in tariff program has opened on all islands within the service territories of HECO, HELCO, and MECO. This incentive program is administered by Accion Group, which has created a new web site for prospective applicants.

MASSACHUSETTS – Bay State Vies to Become Solar State
Massachusetts established a highly anticipated solar carve-out – consisting solely of in-state PV — as part of the state’s renewable portfolio standard. The solar carve-out for 2010 is approximately 30 MW; the overall solar carve-out is close to 400 MW. Along with the accompanying Solar Credit Clearinghouse market, the new solar carve-out is expected to rapidly accelerate PV deployment in Massachusetts.

NEW JERSEY – First Offshore Wind Mandate Makes Headlines (like this one)
New Jersey has become the first U.S. state to establish a mandatory target for offshore wind in an RPS policy. Legislation enacted in August 2010 calls for the New Jersey Board of Public Utilities to develop a percentage-based standard sufficient to result in 1,100 MW of installed offshore wind capacity. The new law does not include a timeline for achieving this target, and other policy details remain uncertain. However, the law does provide that the offshore wind carve-out will not increase the existing Class I renewable energy requirement.

OHIO – Sun to Set on Advanced Energy Fund?
Due to unprecedented demand for funding from the Ohio’s Advanced Energy Fund, the state’s public benefits fund, all funding opportunities have been suspended as of November 5, 2010, in order to allow the Ohio Department of Development to process applications that were previously submitted. With the Advanced Energy Fund scheduled to expire at the end of 2010, future funding opportunities for renewables remain uncertain.

OREGON – BETC Rules Modified; Credit Reduced for Large Wind
On March 18, 2010, the governor signed HB 3680, significantly modifying Oregon’s generous Business Energy Tax Credit.  This legislation reduced the maximum cap on tax credits to wind projects over 10 megawatts, set a sunset date for the tax credits, capped the program budget, and allowed the Oregon Department of Energy more discretion in awarding tax credits. The cap for tax credits for large wind projects was reduced from $10 million to $3.5 million in 2010, $2.5 million in 2011, and $1.5 million in 2012.

WEST VIRGINIA – Net Metering Supersized
The West Virginia Public Service Commission has adopted vastly improved net metering rules that will take effect in August. Not only did the commission raise the system capacity limits for commercial and industrial customers to 500 kW and 2 MW, respectively, but it also increased the overall program capacity to 3% of utility peak load. The new policy also allows for meter aggregation (within two miles of generation) and perpetual kWh rollover at the retail rate.