Supporting Affordable Residential Access To Community Solar In Minnesota

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Originally published at ilsr.org.

How can community solar gardens be financed in ways that ensure broad participation? In early April, we had an opportunity to submit comments on this topic in response to a notice to provide input on the Minnesota Public Utilities Commission’s Community Solar docket (No. 13-867), concerning a proposed residential adder framework for community solar gardens outlined by the Minnesota Department of Commerce and a recent, corresponding analysis conducted by the state’s monopoly utility Xcel Energy on the proposed adder’s economic impacts.

Background

As part of ongoing regulatory oversight of the state’s nationally recognized community solar program, the Minnesota Public Utilities Commission sought input this spring into an analysis released by Xcel Energy on a new residential adder framework — that is, an incentive proposed by the Minnesota Department of Commerce that would be paid to residential subscribers of community solar gardens — with the goal to improve the program’s affordability under its Value of Solar framework.

In support of related comments submitted by allies from Cooperative Energy Futures, our most recent comments addressed:

  1. The importance of a regulatory process that preserves the goals of financeability of and broad participation in the state’s community solar program;
  2. Issues with Xcel’s solar residential carve-out; and
  3. Support for the proposed adder as a reasonable method to ensure equitable distribution of community solar benefits.

Previously, the Minnesota Public Utilities Commission has invited comments on related topics ranging from the adopted Value of Solar Rate to grid modernization that can enable distributed generation. Earlier comments submitted by our team and allies can be found in our Public Utilities Commission Docket Submission Archives (2018|2017|2016). A summary of our most recent comments on the residential adder issue follows.

Preserving Financeability and Broad Participation of Minnesota’s Community Solar Program

Aligning with the Minnesota Public Utilities Commission’s mission, our recent comments underscored the need to maintain a regulatory process and legislative direction that will ensure safe, adequate and efficient utility services such as the state’s community solar program at fair, reasonable rates. This direction requires the Commission act to preserve financeability and broad participation, and in our comments, we stress the importance and consistency of these goals to the public interest, particularly as the Commission considers comments to the Department of Commerce’s proposed residential adder for community solar gardens. We believe such an adder would continue to ensure financeability and incentivize broad participation in the state’s community solar program.

Xcel Energy’s Carve-out Model As Barrier to Residential and Community Solar

We concurred with other commenters, including our allies at Cooperative Energy Futures, that the proposed residential customer capacity carve-out model used by Xcel Energy in its analysis outlining a 5% carve-out of residential subscribers per garden would, at best, act as a cap or ceiling on residential participation in solar gardens (currently over 10%) and, more likely, stifle community solar garden development by making garden development un-financeable. This would be particularly true for solar developers providing access to residential subscribers who may otherwise require an incentive or additional support to attract participation across all customer classes.

Recommending a Residential Adder as Reasonable Cost for Equitable Solar Benefits

Lastly, the submitted comments outline our opinion that the residential adder as proposed by the Minnesota Department of Commerce is a reasonable cost method of meeting legislative intent outlined in the 2018 Value of Solar calculation and dispersing the economic benefits of community solar — such as reduced cost to lower-income, residential subscribers and local economic development — across Xcel Energy’s diverse customers in Minnesota.

As previous, related research from the Minnesota House of Representatives (concerning Minn. Stat. § 216B.1641) indicated, utilizing such an adder mechanism can attract traditionally underserved residential subscribers, especially those who lack “sufficient capital to install their own solar systems” (2013), ensuring participation in the community solar garden program is equitable and accessible to a range of customers.

Xcel Energy’s unrealistic 100 percent residential participation assumption.

While the method Xcel Energy used in its analysis to estimate the incremental, economic impacts of the adder is reasonable, we concurred with Cooperative Energy Futures that existing residential participation estimated at 12% instead be used as a more realistic upper bound on costs when evaluating ratepayer impact and administering subscriptions over the next three years, as opposed to the utility’s unrealistic 100 % residential participation assumption outlined in Xcel Energy’s Revised Value of Solar Adders Analysis in February 2018 (see inset).

Our comments contend that the lower bill credits for residential subscriber participation under a declining value of solar with a residential adder are unlikely to incent substantially different participation by residential subscribers than we see today (closer to the 12% figure), particularly with higher residential bill credits available under the earlier applicable retail rates framework, when compared to the proposed adder.

As a result, we outlined our conclusion to recommend the Commission consider the residential adder but account for lower program costs incurred by providing incentives for residential subscribers that would not be as high as those outlined in Xcel Energy’s latest analysis. We urged the Commission to consider this more reasonable and realistic estimation when making their decision about the proposed residential adder.

Interested in following future updates on regulatory action from our Energy Democracy Initiative? We will post our latest 2018 docket activity here.


For timely updates, follow John Farrell or Marie Donahue on Twitter, our energy work on Facebook, or sign up to get the Energy Democracy weekly update.

Photo Credits: MNCERTs via Flickr (CC 2.0).


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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.

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