The battle over net metering between Colorado's Xcel Energy and rooftop solar advocates could make the recent impassioned debate in Arizona seem tame.
Xcel Energy, Coloradoâs dominant electricity provider, will have its 2014 Renewable Energy Standard Compliance Plan reviewed by the state Public Utilities Commission in February.
In its filings, the utility proposed to change net energy metering (NEM) to a ânet metering incentive.â To validate the request, Xcel filed a value of solar study that puzzled Colorado solar advocates.
âThey presented a draft study to the stakeholder review committee, asked for feedback, and then just filed it with the PUC with no discussion,â said Rick Gilliam, Vote Solar Initiative Research Director. âXcel said they want a conversation about solar, but they wonât return phone calls.â
âThere are two main arguments,â according to Meghan Nutting, SolarCity Policy Director. âOne is that Xcel wants to recover infrastructure costs from the Renewable Energy Standard Adjustment fund.â Xcelâs net metering incentive is the difference between what the study concluded are distributed solarâs cost and benefits, Gilliam explained. âThey want to deduct that from the RESA fund.â
In Xcelâs formulation, taking the net metering incentive from the RESA fund would make it as âtransparentâ as other performance-based incentives, Xcel VP Karen Hyde testified to the PUC in July.
âBut it is questionable whether that is legal,â Gilliam said. âState law says RESA is to incur costs for implementing the RES.â
Xcelâs concern is a cross-subsidy, according to Robin Kittel, Xcel's Director of Regulatory Administration. With NEM, solar owners can sharply reduce their electricity bills and avoid much of the prorated Electric Commodity Adjustment (ECA) bill charge. This shifts system costs to non-solar-owners.
This makes it transparent that âevery solar customer continues to receive benefits from the utility system that are the same or greater than the benefits received by his or her non-solar neighbor,â Hyde testified.  Â
âIt is not clear significant revenues are lost,â Nutting said, because few solar owners actually zero out their bills and completely avoid ECA charges. âThere is no cost shift. APS, Arizonaâs dominant utility, reported that the average monthly bill for solar owners in its territory from July 2012 to June 2013 was $71.27. Part of that pays for infrastructure.â
âIt would be different in Colorado because, overall, the average customer use there is higher,â Gilliam acknowledged. Sunrun reports its average Colorado customer pays more than $20 per month to Xcel.
Of Xcelâs 16,000 Colorado solar owners, 1,700 received checks for producing more electricity than they consumed, Kittel said, and the âaverage residential solar customer serves 90 percent of loadâ with onsite production.
âThe other argument,â Nutting said, âis that the 2014 Compliance Plan should only apply to 2014 and renewables, but this decision will impact future compliance plans, integrated renewables planning and what other utilities in the state do.â
âCost-benefit studies are complicated,â Gilliam added. âTo try to go over those details in a litigated process is a poor way to get a reasonable outcome.â
âThe present NEM incentive was implemented as part of the RES legislation. It is appropriate to bring it to this proceeding,â Kittel said. âIt only applies to 2014, but we are asking the Commission to be aware of the cross-subsidy, because Colorado solar advocates have a 1-million-solar-roofs target.â
Motions by solar groups to remove the current debate from Compliance Plan proceedings were rejected.
Xcelâs study, which Nutting called âunvetted,â applied an âavoided costsâ method. It concluded that the revenue lost to net metering is the retail rate of $0.104 per kilowatt-hour, according to Kittel. The systemâs avoided cost, or benefit, is $0.046 per kilowatt-hour. Xcel wants the $0.058 per kilowatt-hour difference shifted from the RESA fund to Xcelâs ECA account to compensate for revenues lost to solar owners.
The solar industry critique of the study identified specific aspects of distributed solarâs benefit that were either undervalued or not considered by Xcelâs study. As a result, the critique concluded, âthe annual net benefits of solar DG on the [Xcel] system are $13.6 million per year.â
âXcel would say that overvalues solar,â Gilliam said. The way to get beyond the debate over which study is right, he explained, is to have a state-agency-facilitated stakeholder discussion about costs and benefits, item by item.
Future âfacilitated discussions among stakeholders could define how to quantify and incorporate system costs and benefits into new rate designs,â according to Xcel VP Hydeâs testimony.
âThe other alternative is we end up in a fight,â Gilliam said. And this could be the first in a series of moves by Xcel, he added. The next would be a rate change request based on the lower cost valuation. And if Xcel is compensated from the RESA fund, it would effectively cap NEM at the RESA fundâs 2 percent of utility bills cap. Finally, Xcel would, as Hydeâs testimony acknowledged, pursue a legislative change to NEM.
After proposed NEM rollbacks failed in Arizona and other states, Gilliam said, Xcel seems to have âdecided to try something more subtle and creative.â A confrontation at the PUC is nearing, he warned. âThe only way to stop it now would be a settlement. But I have made offers to Xcel and there has been no substantive response.âÂ
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