Is R.I. Ready for Increase in Solar Connections?
By Cynthia Drummond / ecoRI News contributor
Rhode Island’s goal is to meet its electricity needs with 100% renewable energy by 2033. (Frank Carini/ecoRI News photos)
Described
as the most-ambitious legislation of its kind in the country, a new law signed
by Gov. Dan McKee at the end of the last legislative session will require
utility companies to buy more power from renewable sources. The goal is to meet
Rhode Island’s electricity needs with 100% renewable energy by 2033.
But
there is one major challenge to overcome in achieving that objective: a lack of
infrastructure enabling solar-energy installations to connect to the state’s
power grid.
In
an article in the trade magazine, Solar Builder, Jeremy
McDiarmid, vice president for policy and government affairs at the
Massachusetts-based nonprofit group Northeast Clean Energy Council, explained
developers’ concerns regarding the capacity of the grid to accommodate
additional interconnections.
“It’s
a huge issue that reflects an under-invested grid that is not ready for the
volume of distributed generation that we’re seeing and that we need,
particularly solar,” he said.
Contacted
recently by ecoRI News, McDiarmid repeated those concerns.
“We have an ongoing dialogue with Rhode Island Energy, with the [state] Office of Energy Resources, the governor’s office, and our members, many of whom are developing projects in Rhode Island and across the region,” he said.
“We helped
set up a technical council of utility representatives and developer members
that meets, I think, every month, to work through some of the more specific
technical issues around interconnection, but I think we need to have a bigger
conversation about how we pay for upgrades, how we decide where to prioritize
those upgrades, and how we actually get them done.”
Rhode
Island Energy spokesperson Ted Kresse said the utility was conducting studies
known as affected system operator (ASO)
to assess the capacity of the transmission network.
“These
undertakings look at Distributed Generation [DG] saturation in certain regions
and at certain substations to determine if these projects would cause any
adverse impacts to the electric power system,” he wrote in an email to ecoRI
News. “Mitigation plans to address adverse impacts would include modifications
or significant investments to the transmission and distribution systems to
allow the interconnection of this DG.”
Only
larger solar projects, greater than 1 megawatt, are subject to the studies,
which are taking place on a regional level that extends beyond Rhode Island.
The ASO study currently underway covers a large area of New England.
“The current ASO study area covers the Western RI power supply area, which we define as south of West Farnum to the Connecticut border,” Kresse wrote.
The
big question is: Who will foot the bill for the required upgrades to the grid?
With electric bills expected to increase by
up to 50% next year, ratepayers would not take kindly to having to cough up
even more for infrastructure improvements.
McDiarmid
noted the anticipated electric rate increase is the result of higher fossil
fuel costs, making renewable energy produced in Rhode Island an even smarter
choice.
“Homegrown
renewables are a hedge against the volatility of fossil fuel markets, and it
sort of puts eggs in a lot more baskets and makes long-term economic sense, so
you’re not as exposed to those price spikes of natural gas and oil,” he said.
Rhode
Island’s newly appointed interim energy commissioner, Christopher Kearns, said
it was important to understand that the state’s ambitious renewable energy goal
includes procuring energy from other states.
“We’re
going to ultimately meet our renewable energy goals annually by both projects
in Rhode Island, but also, projects in Massachusetts, Connecticut, Vermont, and
other eligible states,” he said. “I think there’s a confusion, just for people
that aren’t in the trenches on this subject, thinking that the 100% renewable
energy standard is just Rhode Island projects.”
Solar
energy might be the largest component of the renewable energy initiative now,
but Kearns said wind power will
become a much bigger player in the coming years, as offshore wind projects come
online.
“A
big component of meeting our renewable requirements this decade and going into
the 2030s is going to be met by offshore wind projects,” Kearns said. “So, for
example, you have the 400-megawatt Revolution offshore wind farm that is
currently going through its state and federal environmental-related permitting
requirements for that project. That project is scheduled to start construction
and be operational in the second half of the 2020s.”
(The
General Assembly, during the last session, also passed a bill securing an
additional 1,000 megawatts of offshore wind power.)
“The
100% is going to be met by a combination of land-based wind, ground-mounted
solar, rooftop solar, offshore wind, and then, to some extent, small-scale
hydropower and biomass energy production,” Kearns said.
A bill passed during the 11th hour of the last General Assembly session changed the way the land under renewable energy projects is taxed.
Bill supports solar
developers, angers local officials
A
bill that lowers property taxes for commercial solar energy developers became
law at the end of the legislative session, infuriating some municipal
officials.
Supported
by two large commercial solar developers — Green Development and Revity Energy —
the bill (H8220) initially
passed in the House but failed in committee in the Senate. The bill’s proponents
got it assigned to a different committee, which recommended passage, and the
Senate passed it in the final days of the session.
Renewable
energy equipment is taxed based on kilowatt capacity under a state regulation,
adopted as a compromise between municipalities and renewable energy developers
after a 2016 Rhode Island Supreme Court decision said such equipment is
tax-exempt under state law.
However,
the regulation applies only to the tangible tax on the equipment, not the
property tax on the land under the equipment. Cities and towns continued to tax
the land under the equipment as land used for manufacturing, but the new law
changes the way that land is taxed.
Beginning
next year, the land must be assessed as if its use has not changed. The only
exception is land taken out of the farm, forest, and open space tax-reduction
program for construction of renewable energy facilities, which cannot be
assessed as if they were still in the program.
Critics
say the law also deals a blow to efforts to discourage commercial developers
from clearing forests for solar arrays and build instead on already-disturbed
or developed land.
More
than 1,000 acres of Rhode Island forestland have been cleared to make way for
solar energy projects. In a small, densely populated state, that’s a lot of
trees and loss of the carbon sequestration they provide.
Officials
in rural towns such as Hopkinton, which has seen about 200 acres of forest
clear-cut for solar developments, are incensed. Town Council President Steve
Moffitt said he felt betrayed by developers, who dangled the promise of additional
tax revenue as an incentive for approving their applications.
“Definitely,
the rug was pulled out from underneath us,” he said, “… it’s clear as day. I
mean, developers’ attorneys sat there and promised — they even threw numbers
out — ‘This is how much in taxes this project is going to bring.’ A specific
number, and it included the tangible and the property tax.”
In
a June 20 letter to Hopkinton town manager Brian Rosso, tax assessor Tiana
Zartman noted the legislation creates a disparity between commercial solar
developers and other property owners.
“Another
issue with the legislation is that it would treat the investors of the solar
projects differently than all the other property owners, since the assessment
of the property would not be based on the actual use of the property,” she
wrote.
In
Rhode Island and Massachusetts, where incentives for solar energy development
have promoted a proliferation of projects, McDiarmid said the cost of
interconnections has skyrocketed, with the utility — then National Grid, now
Rhode Island Energy — passing along not only the interconnection costs, but
also operation and maintenance expenses, known as “direct assignment facility”
charges.
The
new legislation, he said, would ease some of the uncertainty developers face.
“This
bill creates a little more certainty for developers, who are building
projects,” he said. “I think in general, this bill does a good thing for the
solar industry, in a way that’s fair and predictable.”
Before
its 11th-hour push through the Senate, the House version of 8220 was opposed by
several organizations, including the Rhode Island League of Cities and Towns.
In
a letter to the Senate Committee on Judiciary, policy director Jordan Day
described the legislation as “preferential treatment” for solar developers.
“[W]henever
the General Assembly establishes special treatment for one population or
industry, those lost revenues are pushed to other property taxpayers,” he
wrote.
In
his letter opposing the bill, Grow Smart Rhode Island executive director Scott
Wolf noted Rhode Island taxpayers already subsidize renewable energy.
“According
to RI Energy, nearly $30 million will be collected from Rhode Island ratepayers
to support renewable energy for their program year ending in March 2023,” he
wrote.
Scott
Millar, Grow Smart’s director of conservation, said the bill’s passage was the
result of effective lobbying by solar developers and places a financial burden
on cities and towns.
“This law comes in and says once they’ve developed the solar, you have to maintain, whatever it was assessed previously, you have to maintain that, which, in my opinion is outrageous, because utility-scale solar has been determined by Rhode Island courts to be a manufacturing use, so it seems logical to me, and to many others, if you’re going to convert land to a manufacturing use, that land should be logically taxed as manufacturing, not undeveloped forestland,” he said.
“If the General Assembly believes that the establishment
of renewable energy needs a tax break, that’s fine, but cities and towns should
be reimbursed for that lost revenue, just as they are with the loss of the car
tax.”