CEA Report: States Are Seeking More Economically Efficient Solar Incentives

Solar panel installation on household

Energy Manager Today took a look at CEA’s solar incentive analysis.

As part of Consumer Energy Alliance’s (CEA’s) Solar Energy Future campaign, the 400,000-member nationwide advocacy group on August 8 released a new report, “Incentivizing Solar Energy: An In-Depth Analysis of U.S. Solar Incentives.” Conducted on behalf of CEA by Borlick & Associates, a management consulting group, the study is intended to inform policy makers by quantifying the total incentives as a percentage of the installed cost of a typical residential solar facility located in each of 15 states: Arizona, California, Connecticut, Florida, Georgia, Illinois, Louisiana, Maine, Massachusetts, Michigan, Minnesota, New Hampshire, New Jersey, Nevada, and North Carolina.

Read more – Energy Manager Today

CEA: Numerous Financial Incentives Push Residential Solar Costs to Record Lows

CEA’s Michael Whatley was quoted in Daily Energy Insider’s article on CEA’s solar incentive analysis.

A variety of financial incentives offered by the government and utilities for residents who install rooftop solar systems are significant and have reduced customers’ net costs to record-low levels, a new analysis by the non-profit Consumer Energy Alliance (CEA) found. The first-of-its-kind report analyzes the cost for a typical solar facility in 15 states, detailing the federal, state and local incentives available for rooftop solar photovoltaic (PV).

Read more – Daily Energy Insider

Labor Union Group Urges Expanded Infrastructure Development to Meet Power Plan Goals

Building Under Construction with Crane

How critical will expanding the use of natural gas be to meeting the goals of U.S. EPA’s Clean Power Plan?  Yvette Pena-O’Sullivan, assistant director for legislation and politics at the Laborers’ International Union of North America, which recently launched its Clean Power Progress campaign focused on state-by-state advocacy of natural gas infrastructure development, explains why she believes pipeline opponents are hampering states’ ability to meet the targets outlined in the power plan.

Watch the video here.

CEA Releases Comprehensive Solar Incentive Analysis; Highlights Importance of Pro-Solar, Pro-Grid, Pro-Consumer Policies

Incentivizing Solar Energy: An In-Depth Analysis of U.S. Solar Incentives

As part of Consumer Energy Alliance’s (CEA) Solar Energy Future campaign, the organization today released a new report, “Incentivizing Solar Energy: An In-Depth Analysis of U.S. Solar Incentives,” that provides a comprehensive quantification of solar incentives available for U.S. energy consumers. The report analyzes the cost for a typical solar facility in 15 states and details the federal, state, and local incentives available for rooftop solar photovoltaic (PV). No previous analysis has ever quantified this data.

solar_report_090716

Among the report’s key findings:

• Existing Incentives For Residential Solar PV Are Significant
• Third Party-Owned Solar PV Facilities Receive Significant Incentives
• Existing Incentives May Change the Economics of Future Investments in Solar
• The NEM Incentive Shifts Costs onto Less Affluent Customers
• Incentives For Residential Solar PV Vary Widely Among The States

The report also found that government incentives, combined with utility offered incentives, have reduced residential customers’ net costs of installing rooftop solar systems to record-low levels. These reductions are now so significant that, in many states, total incentives are greater than a solar system’s total costs. In light of these dramatic cost reductions, many states are re-examining the scope and methods surrounding their incentive programs and are now considering programs that rely more on a competitive marketplace to provide the economically optimal levels of rooftop solar adoption.

“As the technology continues to advance, solar energy is becoming an even more incredibly powerful and cost-competitive technology that has the potential to change the face of American energy both today and in the future,” said Michael Whatley, Executive Vice President of CEA. “Solar brings with it tremendous benefits for all consumers. Solar’s deployment has been truly remarkable as growth rates have exceeded 40% a year for the past five years.”

Whatley added: “As solar energy continues to progress as a larger slice of America’s all-of-the-above energy pie, we hope that CEA’s new report will help yield pro-solar, pro-grid and pro-consumer policies to ensure the proliferation of solar technology, the continued efficiency of a robust electric grid, and increased access to clean, renewable, affordable, and reliable energy sources for all American consumers.”

The report analyzed the incentives for solar in a cross section of states including Arizona, California, Connecticut, Florida, Georgia, Illinois, Louisiana, Maine, Massachusetts, Michigan, Minnesota, Nevada, New Hampshire, New Jersey, and North Carolina. This report relies on public data and a relatively analytical, conservative approach to quantify the most common incentives for solar energy. To review the full results of this analysis and a copy of the report, please visit solarenergyfuture.org.

To read the executive summary, please click here.

For the full report, please click here.

How Energy Can Help School Districts

CEA’s Vice-President for State Affairs, Brydon Ross, discusses how domestically produced energy can help support schools in West Virginia.

The heartbreaking effects of market forces and a federal regulatory onslaught on Appalachia stretch far beyond discouraging headlines about lost mining and energy jobs and mounting budget pressures from declining severance tax revenue. Just look at Boone County, where about 40 school district employees resigned amid an ongoing budget crisis triggered by the state’s economic downturn and losses in energy-related property tax value.

Read more – Charleston Gazette-Mail

Energizing Massachusetts

Boston Massachusetts Skyline

CEA’s Michael Whatley was quoted discussing the need for expanding New England’s energy infrastructure.

“The simple truth is Massachusetts’ energy consumers – families, small businesses, and manufacturers – cannot continue to pay among the highest energy costs in this country. Consumers want our elected leaders in Boston to develop a responsible, balanced energy policy by promoting diversity in energy resources that are clean, reliable, and affordable.”

Read more – Energy Tomorrow

NH’s Energy Infrastructure Needs a Boost

Friends grilling

Ken Merrifield, the Mayor of the city of Franklin, talks about the inadequate energy infrastructure serving the state of New Hampshire and its detriment to businesses and families.

Manufacturers across the country are benefiting from America’s new position as the world’s leading natural gas producer. Companies that once fled overseas are returning to other parts of the United States because of lower manufacturing costs. Businesses that were once thinking of leaving are now growing and adding jobs. We need to make this happen in New Hampshire by adding the energy infrastructure required to take advantage of this newly abundant natural resource…

…New Hampshire, meanwhile, may risk losing more manufacturers because energy costs here are still skyhigh due to the lack of energy infrastructure required to efficiently transport natural gas to our area.

Read more – New Hampshire Business Review

Pipeline Debate Wages on in West Virginia

CEA’s Brydon Ross was featured in The State Journal discussing the importance of pipeline infrastructure in West Virginia.

Pipeline infrastructure has long been a topic of debate in the United States, and more recently in West Virginia, where more than a dozen new pipelines and pipeline expansion projects are currently pending regulatory approval. Industry developers and their supporters tout the widespread economic benefits of infrastructure development, but an army of opponents has raised numerous concerns with water contamination and other public health impacts, wildlife disturbance and quality-of-life issues caused by nearby development.

Read more – The State Journal

Americans Saving $19 Billion This Year at Pump, Experts Say

Gas station fuel pump octane

CEA’s Mike Butler was recently interviewed on the amount of money consumers are saving at the pump.

As the summer’s road trip season draws to a close, American drivers are realizing about $19 billion in fuel savings compared to what they paid at the pump in 2015, fuel and travel industry experts said. The lowest average gasoline prices since 2004 contributed to the windfall and led to what many officials predict will be a record-setting summer travel season.

Read more – Pittsburgh Tribune-Review

Building the Bakken

CEA’s Brydon Ross was interviewed on the importance of pipelines in America, especially those in the Bakken oil fields.

Read more – Oilman Magazine