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Scott says solar industry ready to be weaned from price supports

Administration report says subsidies distort economy, favor wealthy, support purchase of power not in demand by consumers

November 14, 2019 – by Guy Page – Gov. Phil Scott supports cutting price supports for solar power, he said at a press conference today.

Vermont has the fifth-highest residential electricity rates in the U.S., due in part to an increasing market-share of solar power, which by state law utilities must buy at a fixed price, usually between 14-18 cents per kilowatt-hour. The “market rate” for electricity in New England is about 3-5 cents/kilowatt-hour.

“There comes a time you have to wean yourself off. When you’re paying out more than you are receiving. It’s not a good market approach,” Gov. Scott said. “It was a great incentive to jumpstart the renewable sector.”

Emphasis on was. A Nov. 1 proposal by his administration’s Department of Public Service would in effect reduce consumer cost of ‘net-metered’ price-supported solar power, which the report says now:

Benefits the wealthy: “A household in a high earning town is more likely to have a solar system than a household in a low earning town.”  Price supports “shift” about 9.2 cents per kilowatt-hour of solar power production to non-solar power producers. The Nov. 1 plan would return that money to non-producers through credits to monthly power bills over the next 10 years.

Hurts the economy: Net-metering provides jobs [est. 6,000] “but does so in a way that results in economic distortion….there is less disposable income and therefore less economic activity across Vermont.”

Offers less value to consumers than cheaper (3-6 cent) unsubsidized power (hydro, nuclear, gas) because consumer demand for solar is low when its output is high: “Over the last five years, the energy value of the solar output was worth approximately 8% less than the average wholesale energy price.”

It remains to be seen if the Legislature, which gave birth to net-metering in 2011, believes the industry is ready to be weaned.

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