Solar for ME

Solar Power for Maine People

  • STATS: Solar Jobs in Maine
  • INFO: Why Go Solar in Maine?
  • MYTH-BUSTING: Does Solar Get Subsidies?
  • SOLAR Voter Guide
  • Solar In the News
  • Who We Are

Website Built by ReVision Energy

Lawmakers Consider Expanding Solar Incentives in Maine

April 14, 2017 by Matt McGillvray

From the Portland Press Herald:

The near-term future of rooftop solar energy in Maine is likely to be decided this spring, as lawmakers consider changes to a widely criticized rule approved in January by the Public Utilities Commission.

Two major bills are pending that would supersede the PUC’s approach to compensating homeowners for the solar power they generate, an incentive called net energy billing or net metering. If nothing happens, the PUC rule goes into force in 2018.

Remember that in 2015 the very same PUC concluded a study into the value of solar in Maine. What it found was that solar benefits all ratepayers, whether they have solar on their roof or not. Our take is that even with the benefit of several months to reconsider their initial ruling, the PUC has decided to issue an un-implementable, ‘judgement with no trial’ indictment of solar that ignores their own data showing that solar adds tremendous value to the grid and that utility customers should be able to benefit from this value.

One bill, sponsored by Rep. Seth Berry, D-Bowdoinham, would preserve the full financial incentives of net metering, and offer rebates to help more homes and businesses generate electricity from the sun. This bill is backed by the Maine Environmental Priorities Coalition, which represents conservation, faith-based and public health groups.

Another bill is due to be sponsored by Sen. Tom Saviello, R-Wilton. It also would preserve full net-metering incentives, but only until a PUC study determines how to use smart electric meters to calculate the value of solar at different times of the day and year. It was developed with help from industry leaders, including ReVision Energy, Maine’s largest solar installer, and SunRun, the nation’s top rooftop solar company.

Read the full article here: http://www.pressherald.com/2017/03/20/bills-to-expand-solar-incentives-ready-to-launch/

Filed Under: In the News

A Formal Petition to the PUC for Reconsideration of New Solar Net Metering Rule

March 21, 2017 by Matt McGillvray

Maine Businesses, Solar Companies, Workers, Conservation and Public Health Groups, Mainers Who Want to Install Solar and Others, Formally Petition PUC for Reconsideration of New Solar Net Metering Rule

More than 2,000 Maine residents join request

AUGUSTA, MAINE– Deeply troubled by the solar rule adopted by the Maine Public Utilities Commission (PUC) last month, large and small businesses, solar companies, workers, conservation and public health groups, and Mainers who want to install solar businesses filed a formal “petition for reconsideration” today. They were joined by a broad coalition of Maine businesses, public interest organizations, and citizens. The petition was endorsed by more than 2,150 individuals from across Maine. The petitioners argued that the weakening of net metering is not in the public interest, would likely raise electricity costs, and did not stem from an adequate or fair analysis of net metering or the proposed changes to it.

At issue is the PUC proposal to phase out net metering and to add a new provision: for the first time utilities would charge Maine homes and businesses a fee for solar power they produce and consume themselves on site. This is akin to utilities charging people who use less electricity an extra fee because they dry their clothes on a clothes line. In addition, although last fall the PUC itself proposed that the 10-person limit on community solar farms be eliminated, the final rule retained this arbitrary limit.

The petition urges the PUC to rescind its recent amendments to net metering rules, conduct a thorough analysis of the costs and benefits of net metering, and re-do rules that encourage solar power in a way that is fair and helps lower costs for all. Failing that, the groups called on the Legislature to take swift action this session to overturn the rules and pass a solar policy.

If the PUC rules take effect as scheduled, at the end of 2017, the rule would strike a blow to the already struggling solar industry here in Maine, and there would be ripple effects throughout the state’s economy.

“The Maine solar industry is growing and providing local jobs here in Maine that cannot be outsourced,” said Holly Noyes of ReVision Energy. “The PUC’s ruling is taking the industry and the state in the wrong direction.”

The solar industry can help Maine attract and retain younger workers: Noyes, a resident of Palermo, was able to move back to Maine, and be near her family and their farm in Albion, thanks to her job at ReVision Energy. Maine is in last place in New England for solar jobs per capita because of the political and regulatory weakness and uncertainty that has plagued Maine for the last several years. Elsewhere in the country, solar jobs are expanding at a rate of more than 20 percent per year.

“We should be increasing good-paying solar jobs that retain our young people and stabilizing energy prices for all Mainers. Instead we continue to struggle with policies that ignore the needs of our state and fail to utilize the common sense that has been a Maine hallmark,” said Vaughan Woodruff, Owner of Insource Renewables in Pittsfield. “The new PUC rule straps Maine ratepayers with unnecessary costs and creates further barriers for Mainers looking to invest in solar.

“The PUC ruling vastly diminishes the possibility of businesses like ours making use of our land to harness a source of sustainable energy,” said Andy Smith, a dairy farmer from The Milkhouse in Monmouth. “This ruling leaves Maine people and businesses behind, putting us at competitive disadvantage with other more progressive states that are embracing the future of energy.”

“The Commission’s new rule is in direct conflict with the Legislature’s clearly stated goals and policies that encourage the development of more solar in the state,” said Emily Green, Staff Attorney at the Conservation Law Foundation. “Reducing customers’ returns on solar investment mean fewer installations, less energy independence, loss of jobs, economic decline, and a dramatic increase in toxic emissions into our atmosphere.”

The petitioners argue the PUC ignored evidence of the benefits solar power delivers to all ratepayers, as well as the critical role net metering plays as a catalyst to solar expansion. The Commission also paid virtually no attention to the benefits that solar power has for Maine’s environment and public health because it reduces air emissions from fossil-fuel fired power plants.

“The Maine Public Health Association strongly supports efforts to expand clean, healthy, and renewable power in Maine,” said Ed Miller, a board member with the Maine Public Health Association. “Good energy policy is good health policy.”

Furthermore, the PUC rule hinder Maine’s efforts to tackling the true culprit of electricity price hikes: the transmission and distribution of electricity.

“Costly grid investments, including new transmission lines, are the real elephant in the room when it comes to electricity rates,” said Dylan Voorhees, Climate and Clean Energy Director of the Natural Resources Council of Maine. “The PUC’s own research showed that more solar power would lower electric rates by reducing the need for costly grid infrastructure and the need to run the most expensive power on peak days. As a result, the PUC’s rule to slow down the growth of solar will make us more dependent on these high-cost choices.”

The PUC decision is at odds with public opinion in Maine as well. Thousands of Maine people and organizations submitted comments and signed petitions last fall, pleading with the PUC to preserve or improve net metering. Recent polls indicate that a decisive majority of Mainers want to see the Legislature take action to support solar and oppose net metering rollbacks. This is true regardless of party affiliation, income, or geography.

The PUC net metering rule:

1-     Phases out net metering for new customers starting in 2018. Beginning then, solar customers would no longer receive a 1-to-1 credit for electricity they put on the grid vs. what they purchase from the grid, which has been the basis of net metering for decades. This phase-out requires complicated new billing arrangements by utilities.

2-     Requires the installation of a second, dedicated meter that will allow utilities to measure the total amount of electricity a solar system generates. The cost of this second meter will be borne by all ratepayers. (The rule also fails to take any advantage of smart meters now on nearly every Maine home and business.)

3-     Uses the new meters to enable utilities to charge solar customers a “delivery” fee even for electricity that never leaves their home or business.

4-     Fails to remove the current limit of 10 people in community solar farms, which is an arbitrary limit that the PUC had proposed lifting but then failed to change in its final rule.

 

 

The following organizations and businesses join in support of this petition:

  • American Lung Association of the Northeast
  • City of Belfast Energy Committee
  • Coastal Enterprises, Inc.
  • Crystal Spring Farm Community Solar Association
  • Goggin Energy
  • Heliotropic Technologies
  • Industrial Energy Consumers Group
  • Maine Audubon
  • Maine Conservation Voters
  • Maine Public Health Association
  • Maine Small Business Coalition
  • Maine Solar Solutions, LLC
  • The Milkhouse
  • PeaceWorks of Greater Brunswick
  • Physicians for Social Responsibility, Maine Chapter
  • Polaris Associates
  • Portland Climate Action Team
  • Renewable Energy Development Associates
  • ReVision Energy
  • Sierra Club, Maine Chapter
  • St. Joseph’s College
  • Sundog Solar
  • SunRaise Investments
  • Union of Concerned Scientists
  • 350 Maine

Plus 2150 individual Maine residents

Filed Under: In the News

Solar Benefits All Ratepayers

October 31, 2016 by Matt McGillvray

Zach Good of ReVision Energy prepares a roof for solar panels at a home on Overlook Lane in Cape Elizabeth in 2015. Shawn Patrick Ouellette/Potland Press Herald Staff Photographer
Zach Good of ReVision Energy prepares a roof for solar panels at a home on Overlook Lane in Cape Elizabeth in 2015. Shawn Patrick Ouellette/Potland Press Herald Staff Photographer

In an editorial to the Portland Press Herald, Steve Hinchman, Director of Financing at ReVision Energy, pens a response to the misconceptions being spread about solar net metering by the electric utility industry. His message? Don’t believe the lies.

Independent studies, in state after state including Maine, have repeatedly found that solar net metering saves money for all electric ratepayers. Plus, residential solar development is proven to help grow local economies, create new jobs, raise incomes and reduce pollution.

But the electric utilities want you to think otherwise, and appear to be willing to say anything to make their case.

The industry, working through trade groups, is in a panic about rooftop solar. A 2013 Edison Electric Institute (EEI) report identified solar as a “disruptive technology,” capable of unraveling the utility industry’s monopoly franchise just as cell phones did to the landline telephone industry.

As part of that report, EEI laid out a playbook to undermine state policies that support consumer-owned rooftop solar. Their primary target – net metering, which is a key component of a modern energy grid that gives consumers the right to generate their own energy and get a fair credit for excess power sent to neighbors.

Net metering is the fundamental building block to any stable solar market, and currently exists in over 40 states across the country. Utilities have repeatedly tried (and failed) to label it a subsidy.

Read the full article at the Press Herald: http://www.pressherald.com/2016/10/30/maine-voices-solar-benefits-all-ratepayers/

Filed Under: In the News

  • « Previous Page
  • 1
  • 2
  • 3
  • 4
  • 5
  • 6
  • …
  • 25
  • Next Page »

Fun Solar Facts

Maine receives 33% more available solar energy than Germany, a world leader in solar technology adoption.

Covering just 1% of Maine's land mass to solar would capture enough solar energy to power our energy needs locally, indefinitely.

Modern grid-tied solar electric arrays have no moving parts - no batteries at all.

Recent Posts

  • Distributed solar saved ISO-NE consumers $20M during July heatwave, report says
  • Time for lawmakers to override solar veto
  • Net Metering Solar Energy Compromise Heads to LePage with Enough Support to Withstand Veto
  • Powerful interests shaping fate of Maine’s solar industry
  • Maine is on a disastrous path — if it ever wants to benefit from solar energy