Activists decry lower compensation rate for rooftop solar in Utah

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(Laura Seitz, KSL)


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SALT LAKE CITY — Rooftop solar advocates say they fear a recent decision by the Utah Public Service Commission will deter new investment in the renewable energy by making it less financially attractive for potential customers.

The decision late Friday decreased the export credit rate from 9.4 cents to 5.969 cents per kilowatt-hour in the summer and 5.639 cents per kilowatt-hour in the winter. Rocky Mountain Power's original request was to reduce the export credit to 1.5 cents per kilowatt-hour.

Rocky Mountain Power made the rate reduction request after a three-year study and based it on an analysis it said showed non-rooftop solar customers were unfairly shouldering the costs of transmission and other infrastructure because those with solar were not paying for those fixed costs.

But advocates said beyond those fixed costs, Rocky Mountain Power — and the public service commission — needed to properly assess the environmental and public health benefits that come with having rooftop solar and factor that into a cost-benefit analysis.

The commission disagreed.

"While we recognize the importance of environmental considerations, carbon policy, economic development and public health, these matters fall within the regulatory ambit of other government agencies," the commission's ruling said. "We will not appropriate these agencies' authority or pretend to their essential expertise by adopting a boundless view of our own in the context of utility ratemaking."

That reasoning brought criticism and disappointment from advocates.

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"Utah's rooftop solar industry was already hurting after previous rate changes, so reducing the export credit at a time where hundreds of solar jobs have been lost due to COVID-19 is a fatal blow to rooftop solar," HEAL Utah's Executive Director Dr. Scott Williams said. "Deliberately deciding not to value the environmental, public health and economic development implications associated with rooftop solar is a severe disservice to the customers the PSC is meant to protect."

The new rate does not kick in for current rooftop solar owners until the early 2030s. All new applications will be subject to modified rate.

Correction: An earlier version said the new rate system would not take effect until Jan. 1. It took effect immediately.

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Amy Joi O'Donoghue
Amy Joi O’Donoghue is a reporter for the Utah InDepth team at the Deseret News with decades of expertise in land and environmental issues.

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