Clean energy forces messy changes for utilities and regulators
California’s push for clean energy is forcing the players — consumers, regulators, utilities and fuel producers — into an uncomfortable dance that has each stepping on others’ toes.
But all must learn to perform together or risk the reliability of crucial energy services, representatives of the various quarters said during the first of three community forums on the future of energy regulation convened by California Public Utilities Commission.
Edward Randolph, director of the commission’s energy division, issued a word of caution: The energy sector simply must make changes that line up with the state’s growing mandates for clean energy.
“If they don’t want to be a buggy-and-whip company, they have to adjust,” Randolph said during Thursday’s meeting at the commission’s San Francisco headquarters.
George Minter, a regional vice president for Southern California Gas Co., said his company is willing to change, in part by focusing on production of clean gas as an alternative to fossil fuel.
“The challenge is how do we address the use of our gas system, the use of our electric system?” Minter said.
Challenges abound as utility companies face lower electricity consumption because of increases in energy efficiency and consumers producing their own power; oil refiners must determine how their industry will operate in the slow shift to electric vehicles. And businesses and consumers are looking for ways to cut their costs.
“How we all play together and how we all dance together is looking different,” said Catherine Reheis-Boyd, president of the Western State Petroleum Assn., which represents oil refiners. “We’re all in the same space.”
Ultimately, the state is pushing toward a carbon-free electric grid. Current requirements have set mandates for 50% of electricity produced by clean energy by 2030. Senate President Pro Tem Kevin de Leon wants to raise the bar to 100% clean energy by 2045.
Even regulators are trying to figure out how to meet the demands.
At the January unveiling of a Tesla Inc. electricity storage system for Southern California Edison, commission President Michael Picker marveled at how rapidly advancements in technology are changing the energy landscape.
“The innovation taking place occurs faster than we can regulate,” Picker said during the event at Edison’s Mira Loma substation in Ontario.
Within the last decade, the electricity industry has undergone a dramatic shift as solar power and developments in electricity storage have become focal points of the new energy economy.
Last year, solar was the source of 39% of new electricity generation deployed around the country, followed by natural gas at 29%.
A key shift: homeowners and businesses have become power producers themselves with rooftop solar panels. Utilities never contemplated consumers sending power to the electric grid when the network of power lines was created a century ago.
“They’re looking at 50% of their load leaving, maybe 80% of their load, leaving over time,” Matthew Freedman, an attorney for the Utility Reform Network, an advocacy organization that represents consumers, said during Thursday’s forum.
The effect of the changes, Freedman said, could adversely affect not only businesses but also consumers.
“As we design policies, we need to be mindful about how technologies and costs are going to change,” Freedman said.
Tesla chief Elon Musk is launching the latest version of rooftop solar generation products, a new solar shingle product he demonstrated last fall that would replace the boxy products that currently attach to building rooftops. Musk tweeted Friday that the company will begin taking orders in April.