Overwhelming support for raising net metering caps at June 2nd hearing

June 9, 2015

On June 2nd, stakeholders, legislators, and community members came before the Telecommunications, Utilities and Energy Committee to express their concerns over the future solar in light of net metering caps. There was overwhelming support among those who spoke, to raise or abolish the cap in order to allow solar projects to continue to be developed in all regions around the state.

The day before the hearing,  Attorney General Maura Healy sent a statement in support of immediately raising the caps as well. Representatives from the Baker administration and the utility companies, however, spoke in opposition to any legislative efforts to raise net metering caps absent a long-term policy solution for solar.  Legislation along these lines is of utmost concern to the solar community because projects in regions where the cap has been hit, such as National Grid territory, have already been stalled.

Read hearing testimony from representatives from the Acadia CenterClean Water Action, Coalition for Social Justice, Codman Square NDCCommunity Labor United, the Dismas House, E2Environment Massachusetts, MassSolar, Neighbor to Neighbor Massachusetts, New England Clean Energy, Next Step Living, Sierra Club, the Town of Easton, and Vote Solar.

Several organizations publiches blog posts about the event.  You can read the Sierra Club summary here and the Next Step Living summary here.  Vote Solar's blog post is included below.

This week, solar supporters in Massachusetts rallied to send a clear message that the state should act immediately to raise the net metering cap and keep solar shining. 100 concerned citizens showed up at the Capitol for a hearing of the legislature’s joint energy committee. The number of solar supporters signed up to testify in support of raising the caps filled a whopping 5 pages. This in-person support was echoed online with a social media action that reached 173,330 people. You can add your voice with a quick tweet now . . .

#SolarIsWorking for MA! Time for lawmakers to #RaiseTheCaps on #solar success #MAPoli

Solar is supporting thousands of jobs, driving billions of dollars of investment and reducing the need for expensive, polluting fossil energy — delivering real benefits to Massachusetts families and businesses. But now that’s at risk due to an unecessary cap on net metering, the critical program that gives customers fair credit on their utility bills for their valuable solar energy. Massachusetts’s impressive solar growth means that half the state has already hit this limit on net metering for larger installations, including many school, business, local government and community shared solar projects.  As a result, hundreds of solar projects in more than 170 towns and cities that should be moving forward have instead ground to a halt.

Net metering is one of the most important policies behind Massachusetts solar success to date.  It’s helped cities like New Bedford reduce energy costs by $6 to $7 million annually, dollars that can be directed instead toward critical community services.  It’s helped Drury High School in North Adams save thousands of dollars, enough to help the school avoid cuts to programs and teachers in the face of low tax revenues. It has even expanded solar access to those who can’t put solar on their own rooftops through community shared projects like the Mill Street Solar Project in Gardner. The electricity generated by the shared solar offsets as much as 80% of the power needs of four local organizations: an assisted living facility, an affordable housing development, a non-profit dedicate to delivering services to those with disabilities, and a family-owned hardware chain that has been a fixture in Gardner since 1908. The one-megawatt system sits on the remediated site of a former furniture manufacturing plant, long since abandoned and razed.

Vote Solar’s Nathan Phelps testifies:

By generating reliable, affordable local power, net metered projects like these are lowering electricity costs throughout their communities for solar and non-solar customers alike. The stakeholder-led Net Metering and Solar Task Force (“NMSTF”) found that when all of the net metering costs and benefits are taken into account, there are significant net benefits ranging from slightly under $8 billion to slightly over $9 billion in a 2,500 MW scenario. The same Task Force report concluded that a scenario with no net metering caps would be the most cost-effective way to develop solar in the state. These savings are particularly critical given that Massachusetts has some of the highest electricity costs in the nation.

In advance of this week’s Energy Committee hearing, Attorney General Maura Healey weighed in with her support for quick action to lift the cap. At the hearing itself, testimony from Vote Solar (PDF) and others also encouraged lawmakers to act immediately on a two-pronged approach to keep solar working for Massachusetts. First and foremost, they should raise the net metering cap to get the state’s solar growth back on track in the near-term. Second, they should direct the Department of Energy Resources (DOER) and the Department of Public Utilities (DPU) to begin the process of establishing a long-term sustainable solar policy framework that will deliver solar benefits for years to come.