Will California finally fix its community solar programs?
A plan to promote community solar
projects paired with batteries has the support of rooftop solar boosters and
skeptics alike, plus the state’s building industry.
California regulators are under
growing pressure to expand a class of clean energy that’s been notably
missing from what’s otherwise a very solar-friendly state: community
solar.
For years, solar developers have
complained that California’s mishmash of programs and policies has failed to
support community solar projects, which make solar power accessible to people
who for one reason or another can’t put panels on their own roofs.
Some roofs aren’t suited for
solar panels because they’re shaded by trees or other buildings. Some building
owners lack high enough credit scores to get approved for financing
for rooftop solar. And about half of the population lives in rented houses
or apartments, where landlords often don’t have any incentive to
go solar.
Community solar projects can be
financed and built on cheap and sunny plots of land by utilities or independent
developers. Customers can sign up as subscribers to that lower-cost solar
power, paying a monthly fee and then earning credits on their electrical
bills; in most well-designed programs, subscribers come out ahead financially,
although details differ from program to program and state to state.
Community solar has been taking
off in other states, but it has languished in the Golden State —
a fact that many advocates blame on poor program design on the part of
utilities and the California Public Utilities Commission.
Now is the time for
a change, according to proponents of community solar. The CPUC is
currently weighing a major decision on reforming net-metering policy
for rooftop solar, and it would make sense to reform rules for community solar
projects as part of the same process, they argue. Solar industry, environmental
and community groups have flooded the CPUC with multiple proposals to
strengthen existing community solar programs — or to create brand-new
ones.
One such proposal that’s getting
a lot of traction would promote community solar projects that are paired
with batteries. The concept comes from the Coalition for Community
Solar Access (CCSA), an alliance of businesses and nonprofits that advocates
for community solar projects.
Unlike most solar policy
proposals in play in California, this one has garnered support from both sides
of the contentious debate over net-metering reform, including both
pro-rooftop-solar groups and state lawmakers, as well as groups that
believe the state’s current net-metering policies are driving up electricity
costs for customers who can’t afford rooftop solar, such as The Utility Reform
Network, the Coalition of California Utility Employees and the Natural
Resources Defense Council.
CCSA’s proposal would pay
a lot more than typical utility rates for electricity that’s exported to
the grid from community solar farms in late afternoon and evening hours during
the state’s hottest months, when solar power fades away and California’s grid
faces the greatest stress. Conversely, it would pay a lot less for power
exported during other times of the day and year.
That would give project
developers a strong incentive to pair solar with batteries that can store
solar power when the grid has more than enough and inject it onto the grid when
it’s needed the most. Indeed, critics of the current net-metering regime are
asking the CPUC to incorporate similar storage incentives into all of
the state’s solar policies.
Homebuilders join the call for
better community solar programs
CCSA’s community solar proposal
has another key ally: the California Building Industry Association.
As of 2020, California’s
building codes require newly built single-family homes to include
solar panels; the requirement will also apply to many new multifamily and
commercial buildings starting in 2023. Homebuilders are worried that
the CPUC’s current net-metering proposal, which will reduce the value
of solar power exported to the grid and add steep monthly charges to the bills
of solar-equipped customers, will burden owners of new homes with increased
costs.
The California Energy Commission,
which sets state building codes, allows builders to develop community solar
projects as an alternative to installing rooftop solar panels on individual
homes. But according to the California Building Industry Association, the
state’s current community solar programs “suffer
from serious deficiencies that undermine their use as a compliance pathway
for builders.”
The trade group has asked
the CPUC to fast-track its consideration of CCSA’s community
solar proposal, in hopes that it could be approved in time to build projects
that leverage the rate category as early as next year.
If the CPUC fails to
take quick steps to create a “viable
community solar program,” that could add undue “complexity
and uncertainty to the building process,” the group contends in a January
filing with the CPUC, which could have the effect of “undermining
energy efficiency goals and driving up costs for builders.” The group fears that
these costs ultimately will be “passed
on in home prices[,] which exacerbates California’s housing crisis.”
So far, the CPUC hasn’t
fast-tracked community solar as part of its already-controversial net-metering
reform process. Its December net-metering proposal characterized such
a move as “premature,” pointing out that
the state’s three big investor-owned utilities are required to file community
solar plans in August 2022, which could serve as an opportunity for
considering changes to the state’s existing programs.
But Charlie Coggeshall, CCSA’s
director of policy and regulatory affairs, thinks the CPUC should act
more quickly to “finalize our proposal into
a tariff that could be ready in 2023.”
“We have a strong proposal
for reaching these unreachable parts of the market,” he said in an interview.
Community solar is needed to “fill
a market gap for buildings that don’t have a rooftop solar option,”
which includes roughly half of all U.S. buildings, according to research from
the U.S. National Renewable Energy Laboratory.
Why California’s existing
community solar programs have fallen flat
The trick is designing community
solar programs that can do two things at once. First, they must entice developers
and financiers with a long-term opportunity to build projects that offer
predictable returns on their investment. Second, they must offer customers
low-cost, low-risk and low-complexity ways to participate.
California’s existing community
solar programs fall flat on both fronts, according to critics. Many developers
have moved on to pursue far more lucrative and compelling opportunities in
other states.
California’s first community
solar programs were introduced in 2013. But they have struggled
to spur anything close to the total amount of solar they were intended to
generate.
That’s largely because they’re structured in a way that saddles Californians who sign up with higher overall electric bills, Coggeshall said. As community solar developer Solstice points out in its review of the state’s existing programs, most people just aren’t willing to pay more for solar power.
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