Advocates are raising concerns about a proposal from Idaho Power Company that would increase utility bills and uncertainty for many businesses and farmers that want to use solar energy to meet their own electricity needs. The utility’s application to the Idaho Public Utilities Commission, which was filed Friday, seeks to immediately suspend the state’s net metering solar program for its Commercial, Industrial, and Irrigation Customers and keep those markets closed until 2020. Vote Solar and Idaho Conservation League are urging the Commission to reject this latest attempt by the utility to protect its monopoly energy business at the expense of competitive clean energy and consumer choice.
“Idaho Power may be promising 100% clean energy, but now the monopoly utility is making clear that it wants to be the only one that controls that affordable, reliable clean power,” said Briana Kobor, Regulatory Director with Vote Solar. “Every Idaho family, church, school and business should have the right to go solar on their own property if they so choose, and they deserve fair net metering compensation and predictability from their utility for making that investment. This proposal is bad for businesses that want to go solar, bad for Idaho’s growing solar job market, and another worrisome blow to consumer choice and energy freedom from this utility.”
Net metering makes sure that solar customers receive fair credit on their utility bills for the valuable, reliable electricity they deliver to the grid. This individual investment in local solar power reduces the need for expensive utility infrastructure, lowers energy bills, and supports local solar installation jobs. This sudden move by Idaho Power to restrict net metering is already impacting local energy businesses that have developed pipelines of planned solar projects for commercial, industrial and irrigation customers across the state.
“We are a third-generation family-owned Idaho solar company and shocked to hear of the recent filing as 75 percent of our projected revenue for 2019 comes from agricultural and commercial projects,” said Cat Gietzen of Gietzen Solar. “In our experience, it has become clear that the impact of electrical costs on agricultural operations can be extremely prohibitive and solar has given them the opportunity to combat those costs. We hope the Public Utilities Commission will realize the detrimental impact this could have on local Idaho businesses and their families.”
Friday’s filing comes on the heels of a 2017-2018 proceeding in which the utility created a discriminatory new rate class for its residential and small commercial net metering customers for the purpose of modifying net metering in the future, making it the latest in a series of attempts from Idaho Power to weaken this important consumer solar right. The Commission is expected to take up the case in the coming weeks and Vote Solar and Idaho Conservation League will be advocating for fair treatment for Idaho Power’s solar customers.
— Solar Builder magazine
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