By TIM FAULKNER/ecoRI.org
News staff
EDITOR'S NOTE: federal tax credits for renewable energy are scheduled to expire at the end of this year. NOW is the time to consider green energy and energy efficiency before the tax credits go away.
Prices are dropping for renewable energy in Rhode Island. The latest round of fixed-pricing contracts for new solar energy projects are down between 27 percent and 45 percent since the start of the program in 2011.
Prices are dropping for renewable energy in Rhode Island. The latest round of fixed-pricing contracts for new solar energy projects are down between 27 percent and 45 percent since the start of the program in 2011.
The decreases are
happening in the state’s distributed generation, or DG contracts program, which awards 15-year
electricity purchase agreements for large wind and solar projects. The
agreements aim to advance the state’s wind and solar energy sectors by
providing fixed pricing, an agreement that helps the financial viability of the
project.
So far, 27 contracts
have been awarded since the DG program was approved by the General Assembly two
years ago. Twenty-five of the projects were awarded for solar arrays. The first
solar contracts were priced at 34 cents per kilowatt-hour, the latest prices are
at 16 cents.
The latest are in
Warren, Johnston, Pawtucket and Glocester, and all are solar projects. For the
first time, a 500-kilowatt commercial-scale food digester was
awarded a contract for a proposed project at the Quonset Business Park in North
Kingstown. Only two contracts have been awarded for new wind turbines, in North
Kingstown and one under construction in Coventry.
The latest round of
contracts was delayed by changes to the program approved this year by the
General Assembly, which set caps for all contract prices.
Efforts to extend the
DG program beyond 2014 failed in the General Assembly this year. An advisory
committee created by the law in 2011 held its first meeting this summer. It is
considering proposals to extend the program beyond next year.
Last month, the state
Economic Development Council (EDC) approved an economic impact study of the
project. The report is due to the General Assembly by March.