Growth would bring green jobs as well as
clean energy
STATE
HOUSE – The General Assembly gave final passage to legislation sponsored
by Rep. Deborah Ruggiero and Sen. V. Susan Sosnowski to expand a program that
encourages the development of renewable energy projects around the state.
The
expansion, supported by environmentalist, potential developers and the state’s
main electric utility, would lead to the development of more wind turbines,
solar panel arrays and other small-scale renewable energy generation projects
around the state, supplying Rhode Island with clean energy as well as jobs and
economic development.
Said
Senator Sosnowski (D-Dist. 37, South Kingstown, New Shoreham), “Massachusetts
and Connecticut have a similar program, and it created green jobs by
establishing a robust residential solar industry there, as it will for Rhode
Island. Opening up the program to residential projects will mean interested
Rhode Islanders can make an investment in their property and the environment
and reap the financial rewards of being a renewable energy producer. Meanwhile,
the construction will help employ their neighbors, the increased availability
will reduce the costs of renewable energy, and we’ll use less non-renewable
energy.”
The
pilot program allowed small-scale energy producers to attach to the electric
grid and sell their energy to National Grid, with a standard 15-year contract
and a set price. The practice is called “distributed generation” because it
involves power generation that is spread around the grid, instead of only at
large power plants.
Larger-scale distributed generation projects would compete,
using the standard contract, but using the set price as a ceiling to ensure price
competition. The pilot program, which expires this year, has been
oversubscribed, with more than 71 applications for the 24 renewable energy
projects awarded.
The
legislation approved today (2014-H
7727Aaa, 2014-S
2960Aaa) extends the program, which is set to expire this year, and
gradually expands the current total target of 40 megawatts over four
years to a total of 160 megawatts of distributed generation power over five
years.
Under the bill, potential developers
can enter 15- or 20-year standard agreements with National Grid that give them
a guaranteed income to help them obtain financing for building their projects.
Or, if they prefer, they may “net meter,” which would allow them to receive
payment at the retail rate for energy they generate in excess of what they use.
While the pilot program was aimed at commercial projects, the expansion in this
legislation opens it up to residential projects as well, which the sponsors
expect will give rise to a boom in residential solar arrays.
The
Rhode Island Commerce Corporation issued a report in May estimated the expansion
will create nearly 250 jobs and an average $30 million annual boost to the
state’s economy.
The bill benefits ratepayers by
encouraging the continuing downward trend in renewable energy prices It does this by using a competitive bidding
process for large and commercial-scale projects and by reducing developers’
financing costs through a guaranteed long-term revenue stream. Under the 2011
pilot program, there was a steady and significant decline in the prices of
renewable energy in the state, including a 50-percent drop in solar energy
prices in the program’s first two years.
It benefits Rhode Island’s economy by reducing
the costs of renewables, and by enabling the growth of the small-scale
residential solar generation industry. Under the pilot program, Rhode Island’s
total solar generation capacity grew from 1.2 MW in 2011 to 21.65 MW including
all projects that were at least under contract by the end of 2012. And as more
projects are built, jobs are added. The number of jobs in the state’s solar industry
grew from 210 in 2012 to 360 in 2013.