APS officially moves to Value of Solar
Arizona regulators have put into place the deal cut between Arizona’s solar industry and Arizona Public Service, as part of the utility’s rate case.
A fourth jurisdiction has now implemented a methodology for the valuation of distributed solar to serve as the basis for compensation, instead of net metering. But while programs in Minnesota, Austin, Texas and New York state were seen as experiments by forward-thinking policy makers to better reflect the true value that solar provides, what has emerged in Arizona is compromise as the result of a hard-fought regulatory battle.
The Arizona Corporation Commission (ACC) yesterday closed up a rate case for Arizona Public Service (APS), the state’s largest utility, which includes rewarding generation from rooftop solar PV under a Value of Solar methodology.
The original version of this methodology, issued last October, was hardly worth of the name. It based the value on utility-scale solar generation, and calculated deferred investments infrastructure and environmental attributes on a five-year basis, details that brought protests from the solar industry.
But through legal wrangling the solar industry was able to achieve a compromise, under which electricity from distributed solar installations installed over the next year will be valued at $0.129 per kilowatt-hour. This value will be revised every year, but the ACC can’t reduce this more than 10% annually. Customers who already installed solar will be grandfathered for 20 years.
The nation’s second-largest residential solar installer, which for years has fought APS, did not exactly applaud this outcome. “While Arizona does not serve as a model to encourage innovation in distributed energy, the joint agreement between the solar industry, APS, and other stakeholders is more proof that rooftop solar is inevitable,” Sunrun Chief Policy Officer Anne Hoskins told pv magazine.