A disturbing story out of the Sooner State this week, noted by
Doug Mataconis at Outside the Beltway. Under the terms of a recently
passed bill, expected to be signed by Governor Mary Fallin,
homeowners who install their own private solar or wind turbine energy
resources and sell some of the juice back to energy companies will be
paying a fee for the privilege.
Utility customers who want to install rooftop solar panels or
small wind turbines could face extra charges on their bills after
legislation passed the Oklahoma House of Representatives on Monday.
Senate Bill 1456 passed 83-5 after no debate in the House. It
passed the Senate last month and now heads to Gov. Mary Fallin for
her approval.
The bill was supported by the state’s major electric utilities,
but drew opposition from solar advocates, environmentalists and
others. It sets up a process at the Oklahoma Corporation Commission
to establish a separate customer class and monthly surcharge for
distributed generation such as rooftop solar or small wind turbines.
As Doug notes, the claimed reasons for the energy companies and
their surrogates (who are behind the move) wanting these fees imposed
are weak tea at best.
While I suppose there might be an argument for allowing utilities
to recoup costs that are legitimately incurred from the practice of
selling energy back to the grid, the idea of charging people extra
for doing something that reduces their dependence on the grid while
at the same time increasing the amount of energy available seems
rather nonsensical. As the linked article goes on to note, these
types of systems benefit energy companies by helping to reduce demand
on the grid during peak hours and by increasing the amount of energy
available during those periods. Given that, one would think that
energy companies would want to encourage this sort of thing rather
than backing measures like this which could potentiallly hamper it.
It’s hard not to see this as an effort by the utility companies to
hamper the competition that solar and wind generated energy provide
them and, of course, to make sure that they still manage to make some
money out of the deal.
There seem to be some activists who are far too quick to embrace
this sort of legislation (currently on the table in a number of
states) by conflating the issue with the many problems associated
with the government getting involved in green energy initiatives.
Read more:
http://commoditiefutures.com/oklahoma-to-charge-privilege-tax-for-going-...
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