Above Photo: Renewable energy advocates say the move could “destroy the rooftop solar industry in one of the states with the most sunshine.” (SolarCity Advocacy/Twitter)
Renewable energy advocates in Nevada are outraged by the state’s solar-killing moves, and they’re not going down without a fight.
The state’s Public Utilities Commission considered requests Wednesday from solar company groups, homeowners, activists, and the state consumer advocate to put a stay on a rate hike that took effect January 1.
The Republican-appointed Commission (PUC) in late December voted to increase a fixed monthly fee for solar customers by about 40 percent while simultaneously reducing the amount customers get paid for excess power they sell to the grid. It also made these changes retroactive—a move one solar executive said would “sabotage” consumers’ investments.
Clean energy advocates swiftly decried the changes, which have left the state’s solar sector “in turmoil.”
Lyndon Rive, CEO of SolarCity, said the move would “destroy the rooftop solar industry in one of the states with the most sunshine.”
In fact, he added, “the one benefactor of this decision would be NV Energy, whose monopoly will have been protected. The people will have lost choice, jobs and faith in their government.”
According to Bloomberg, SolarCity announced last week plans to fire 550 field and support staff in Nevada and Sunrun Inc. followed a day later with “hundreds” more job cuts.
The PUC’s decision “forces Sunrun to displace our Nevada employees, inflicting enormous pain on hard-working Nevada families,” said Bryan Miller, the company’s senior vice president of public policy and power markets. “Nevada passed incentives to attract residents to go solar. But after baiting homeowners with incentives, the state switched the rules, penalizing solar homeowners to deliver additional profit to NV Energy. This bait and switch hurts Nevada families, many of whom are retirees on fixed incomes, and who use solar savings to meet their monthly budgets.”
Renewable energy advocate Judy Treichel, who serves as executive director of the Nevada Nuclear Waste Task Force, belongs to one of those families.
In a guest column for the Las Vegas Sun published Tuesday, Treichel explained how “when the price of solar panels for residential installations dropped significantly, we tapped $8,500 from our retirement savings—after taking into account an NV Energy rebate and federal tax credit—and become a solar household. We were solar-powered all of last year, and our annual savings showed our system would pay for itself within 14 years. Moreover, it was right for the environment.”
Now, she said, “we feel financially ambushed,” continuing:
With the new pricing for NEM customers, the value or price of the energy they produce will be vastly reduced. In addition, the flat service charge for NEM customers will rise to three times that charged to nonsolar residential customers, a kind of penalty for producing much of our own electricity. The people with solar on their homes feel cheated; solar businesses are closing or leaving.
Similar arguments were reiterated on Wednesday, when actor-activist Mark Ruffalo joinedhundreds of Nevadans calling on the PUC to change course—and for Gov. Brian Sandoval to take a stand against the new rates.
I stand with the hundreds of Nevadans asking @nevada_puc to protect #NVsolar, jobs and investments in our clean energy future #WeAreSolar
— Mark Ruffalo (@MarkRuffalo) January 13, 2016
@tanguyserra and @MarkRuffalo speak up against @nevada_puc and stand for strong net metering in NV. #WeAreSolar ☀️
Source Article from https://www.popularresistance.org/with-state-poised-to-squash-rooftop-solar-clean-energy-fight-heats-up-in-nevada/
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