Grassroots Group Promotes Local Alternatives To Wisconsin Utilities’ Big Ticket Spending

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Originally published at ilsr.org.placeholder

Wisconsin’s coal-reliant utilities remain cool to wind and solar despite mounting enthusiasm for renewables. This intransigence places them squarely in the crosshairs of one grassroots group leveraging support from customers and policymakers in order to realign the state’s energy economy with the public good.

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This is part of a series released in October 2016 for Energy Awareness Month highlighting communities and community energy projects on ILSR’s Community Power Map.

Based in the southwestern town of La Farge, SOUL of Wisconsin — an acronym for Save Our Unique Lands — promotes efficient, responsible power management that benefits electricity customers and the local economy while protecting the environment. The group’s main strategy hinges on educating ratepayers, then mobilizing them.

“Acting on principle of efficiency and conservation does not require grand policy changes,” the membership-based organization wrote in a memo. “It requires improving awareness, getting some positive results and patiently sharing the techniques with others.”

Challenging the Status Quo

To date, SOUL has urged regulators and policymakers to rethink several proposed transmission lines and lobbied for more funding for energy efficiency programs for utility customers. The organization has also supported distributed renewable energy production — with solar alone able to provide 40% of the state’s power — touting local economic benefits that don’t come with traditional utility power plants.

Because Wisconsin’s investor-owned utilities like We Energies and Madison Gas & Electric still drive profits by selling more electricity and building new capacity, their policies often squeeze out customers whose habits increasingly diverge from that model. When customers favor energy efficiency and explore renewables, like rooftop solar, recalcitrant utilities dig in their heels and change the rules to make these choices more expensive.

Wisconsin utilities have pitched a series of proposals that impose heftier fixed charges, a common anti-solar policy criticized by clean energy advocates nationwide. The state is an unfortunate leader in the national trend, pushing across-the-board hikes that inflate bills even for customers who reduce their energy use with efficient appliances or who generate their own electricity with rooftop solar panels.

Utilities generally say they need to boost such charges to cover the costs of generating and transmitting power, including new infrastructure. Since 2012 in Wisconsin, regulators approved plans for a series of expensive new transmission lines that, by SOUL’s calculations, will cost ratepayers more than $6 billion — or about $4 per month, per household, for the next four decades.

But Wisconsin’s Public Service Commission has earned a reputation for siding with the utilities it regulates. The three-member panel recently signed off on Xcel Energy’s plans for a new 180-mile transmission line priced at $580 million despite more than 1,700 customer comments criticizing the project, galvanized in part by SOUL.

The Town of Holland, WI, a longtime opponent of the project, appealed the decision, now under review by a LaCrosse County judge. The high-voltage power lines included in the project will cut through Holland, a move it says impinges on property owners’ rights and invites financial risk.

Changing dynamics in the US energy marketplace, underpinned by a deeper emphasis on renewables, obscures the long-range benefits of such projects. Even so, utilities’ reluctance to mix renewables into their portfolios adds to the drag on the clean energy economy promoted by SOUL and its members.

Wisconsinites’ energy bills have increased 65% over the past decade, according to SOUL figures, funneling $18 billion out of the local economy each year — money utility customers could instead invest in energy-saving programs.

But Wisconsin utilities have resisted the transition to cost-effective renewable energy. Last year, the state’s utilities relied on coal for 55.9% of net power generation, according to the latest federal data. Meanwhile, just 8.4% of its net generation came from renewable resources, including biomass and wind. That clocks in well below other states in the region, spotlighting Wisconsin’s policy problem — not a lack of potential.

For comparison, Minnesota in 2015 fueled one-fifth of its net generation using renewable resources. In Iowa, wind alone provided 31.3% of net generation.

Giving Customers Tools for Action

To encourage policymakers to bridge Wisconsin’s gap, SOUL has harnessed rising customer interest in utility reforms to create a crowd-sourced data bank of energy use and costs to illustrate the appetite for greater efficiency programming.

With companion tools that explain efficiency opportunities and calculate potential savings, the organization tracks individual inputs and results, putting hard numbers behind its calls for a new energy mindset in Wisconsin.

Signs of Change?

Wisconsin has become a laggard in good energy policy over the past decade, but not for lack of local action. Enterprising Wisconsin residents and businesses added 5 MW of solar capacity on their own last year, a modest increase in general but a 94% jump from the previous year’s figures.

SOUL is a bright spot for the state’s energy customers and a vision for a more affordable and renewable future.

To learn more about the national movement toward distributed generation and renewables, visit ILSR’s interactive Community Power Map. The tool showcases programming, policies and projects across the U.S., and compares state-by-state performance. Bookmark it and check back for updates.

For timely updates, follow John Farrell on Twitter or get the Energy Democracy weekly update.


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John Farrell

John directs the Democratic Energy program at ILSR and he focuses on energy policy developments that best expand the benefits of local ownership and dispersed generation of renewable energy. His seminal paper, Democratizing the Electricity System, describes how to blast the roadblocks to distributed renewable energy generation, and how such small-scale renewable energy projects are the key to the biggest strides in renewable energy development.   Farrell also authored the landmark report Energy Self-Reliant States, which serves as the definitive energy atlas for the United States, detailing the state-by-state renewable electricity generation potential. Farrell regularly provides discussion and analysis of distributed renewable energy policy on his blog, Energy Self-Reliant States (energyselfreliantstates.org), and articles are regularly syndicated on Grist and Renewable Energy World.   John Farrell can also be found on Twitter @johnffarrell, or at jfarrell@ilsr.org.

John Farrell has 518 posts and counting. See all posts by John Farrell