Net Energy Metering

Note to CPUC - Check Your Premises

Note to CPUC - Check Your Premises

A proposed CPUC decision sets aside a long-standing bipartisan policy regarding on-site solar energy. The policy should remain in effect because it is foundational to creation of a just and affordable state-wide renewable energy eco-system. Its underlying premises are valid. The underlying premises of the proposed decision are not. Better informed and more robust on-going and future consideration of the benefits of rooftop solar can be a positive outcome of the current policy tug of war between electric utilities and local clean energy advocates.

California Energy Democracy's Last Stand

California Energy Democracy's Last Stand

California has ramped up a seventy-six billion dollar investment in all types of solar generation capacity over the past decade. California’s retail solar industry enabled half of the total investment. Rooftop solar has been a bright spot for California’s renewable energy transition even as state regulators and California utilities continue to make other energy democracy enablers - community choice, community solar, community microgrids - hard or impossible to finance.

Regulators are now considering rule changes that impose punitive “grid access” fees on rooftop solar adoption, plus drastic reductions in compensation for electricity that feeds into the grid from rooftop solar arrays. The future of energy democracy in California hangs in the balance.


[1] The proposed CPUC decision is not accompanied by case studies indicating how it will work out for ratepayers.

On-site Solar: Transparency, Imagination and Local Leadership

On-site Solar:  Transparency, Imagination and Local Leadership

On-site solar is the lowest impact, most economically beneficial renewable supply option available to California legislators, policy makers, utilities and energy users. The best state-wide balance between locally produced solar electricity and the output of large solar power plants depends on the best balance for each California city and county. Striking the right balance should be a local choice. For now, the option to produce solar electricity to meet local needs must be expanded, not curtailed.