Report: States Falling Short on Interconnection
and Net Metering
Dce 19, 2007 - EERE Network News
A new report concludes that all 50
states are failing to provide easy access to the
electrical grid for home-grown renewable energy
systems, while only four states are doing their
best to assure that the owners of such systems earn
credit for power fed into the grid. Regarding "interconnection,"
or the connection of customer-owned power systems
to the grid, many states set an arbitrary maximum
size of the system that can be connected to the
grid, or they set a cap on the total combined capacity
of the systems connected to the grid. In many states,
utility customers must pay high fees for interconnection,
while also having to meet unreasonable requirements
for safety features, liability insurance, and approval
paperwork. Regarding "net metering," which provides
a utility bill credit for customers who feed power
into the grid, some states allow utilities to credit
the power at a rate that's lower than the retail
rate, to limit the amount of credit earned, or to
limit the credit that can be carried over from month
to month. Net metering often excludes commercial
and industrial partners and sometimes requires the
installation of an extra meter. And of course, many
states don't have a policy for interconnection or
net metering at all.
The new report, "Freeing the Grid,"
is an update of a 2006 report and is prepared by
the Network for New Energy Choices, the Interstate
Renewable Energy Council (IREC), the Vote Solar
Initiative, and the Solar Alliance. The report finds
that as of September 2007, only 34 states and the
District of Columbia had statewide interconnection
policies, and of those, 8 states and the District
of Columbia received failing grades. New Jersey
and Arizona have the best interconnection policies,
both earning a "B" from the report's authors. Likewise,
only 38 states and the District of Columbia had
statewide net-metering policies, and of those, 4
states and the District of Columbia received failing
grades. Five states—California, Colorado, Maryland,
New Jersey, and Pennsylvania—earned an "A" for their
net-metering policies. The report includes IREC's
model interconnection standards and net-metering
rules, which sets a gold standard against which
the state standards and rules were compared.