Renewable Energy Solar Energy Wind Energy Geothermal Energy Bioenergy Hydropower
 

Tax Reform and Community Based Renewable Energy

By John Farrell, ILSR
February 5, 2009   |   5 Comments

Do you like this opinion & commentary?

Email   Bookmark Bookmark   Print   Feed   Share
 

The information and views expressed in this article are those of the author and not necessarily those of RenewableEnergyWorld.com or the companies that advertise on its Web site and other publications.

5 Reader Comments
Comment
1 of 5
February 5, 2009
Great work John. Thank you for educating us and pushing for FITs. They certainly are less cumbersome than tax credits and they enable many more people to get involved.

It's wonderful to have some large wind farms and CSP plants, but as advocated by ILSR, we need lots and lots of distributed power too. Distributed power reduces pressure on the grid, allows us to do more without being forced to add more transmission and it literally distributes economic and political power to the people.

Clearly we need to significantly increase people power relative to corporate, centralized power.
Comment
2 of 5
February 6, 2009
Your article squarely addresses the issue we have faced here in New Jersey as the state has struggled to transition from solar rebates to market based Solar Renewable Energy Certificates. The failure of buyers of SRECs (the generating companies) to enter into long term contracts for the purchase of SRECs stalled much of the solar market during 2008. So now the state is far behind its solar generation goals and is struggling to come up with ways to catch up. In the meanwhile prices in the spot market for SRECs have continued to climb every month. The BPU's focus on creating a market based approach to setting SREC prices has not worked while creating a Feed In Tariff would have avoided the industry's current dilemma. Unfortunately the word Tariff had negative political connotations in New Jersey because the state deregulated its electric industry years ago and relies on competitive sourcing of electricity through the Basic Generation Service (BGS) auction process. Relying on a competitive process to procure electricity for the state was expected to lower rates, but has instead produced hikes in retail electric rates of over 30% in the past three years. It is time for the New Jersey government to seriously explore the adoption of Feed In Tariffs for at least part of the solar market, and perhaps for Negawatts of electricity from energy efficiency retrofits as well. Otherwise I fear we will be years behind in achieving New Jersey's renewable and energy efficiency goals, if we ever do get there. It is time for the New Jersey regulators to admit that the delays and high SREC prices caused by a flawed market based system have and will continue to negate any potential benefits from a market based SREC pricing approach. The revenue certainty that a FIT has will produce enormous savings in financing energy projects, produce more local solar ownership, and prevent New Jersey from falling behind other states that adopt the FIT approach.
Comment
3 of 5
February 7, 2009
Before we spend too much time praising the German penchant for FITs it would be worth noting that (see link below) in 2005 the price of a kWh of electricity was ~0.24 US cents (at current exchange rates). The US national average is 11 cents. IF, when the author refers to the "remarkable success" of European FITs, he is referring to the effectiveness with which money is transferred from rate payers to owners of highly inefficient generation schemes, then he has a valid point. I hope we are spared such "success" in the US.



http://www.oregon.gov/ENERGY/RENEW/docs/Germany_electricity_costs_2006.pdf
Comment
4 of 5
February 9, 2009
Would the FITs be paid by the customers or subsidized by the government?
Comment
5 of 5
March 15, 2009
Steven, the price of German electricity has very little to do with Feed-in Tariffs. Out of the 24 cents per kilowatt-hour that you cite, only about a penny goes to pay for the FiT program. That's a pretty small price to pay for converting the entire electric system to new energy resources. The program has also created tens of thousands of jobs, and built lots of renewable energy. That looks like a success to me.

If you want to look at "highly inefficient generation schemes" you could could find a good example here in the US. Coal and nuclear plants, which together supply 70% of our electricity, only convert 1/3 of the energy in the fuel into electricity. Another 10% gets lost in the wires. If you flip the switch on an ordinary light bulb, only about 5% of electricity turns into light. The system of coal to generator to wires to light bulb is only about 1% efficient: out of 100 lbs of coal, we waste 99 pounds. Calling that "inefficient" would be generous.

Incidentally, German households use less than 1/2 the electricity of an average US household. So, even though their rates are much higher, their electric bills are lower.

George: from what I have heard the feed-in tariffs considered so far in the US would be paid out of electric rates, not taxes.
Add Your Comment

Registered users, please make sure to Sign-In. We and others want to know your ideas and opinions. If you are not yet Registered -- it's quick and easy. Just click below.
Thanks!

Register Now   Sign-In

Advertise With Us

Solar FlexRack Astenik Solar Enphase Energy SkyFuel American Solar Energy Society AWS Truepower, LLC 2GreenEnergy.com
World's #1 Renewable Energy Network
PennWell
Renewable Energy World Magazine North America Renewable Energy World Magazine International Renewable Energy World Conference & Expo North America Renewable Energy World Conference & Expo Europe Renewable Energy World Conference & Expo Asia Renewable Energy World Conference & Expo India Renewable Energy World Conference & Expo Africa
RenewableEnergyWorld.com Photovoltaics World Magazine Solar Power Gen Conference & Expo Hydro Review Magazine Hydro Review World Magazine
HydroVision International HydroVision Brazil HydroVision India HydroVision Russia
Twitter Facebook Linked In RSS Feeds e-Newsletters