Bloomington (IN) Hopes to Increase Solar Capacity by 5 MW

Posted by Laura Arnold  /   August 01, 2017  /   Posted in solar  /   No Comments

 Bloomington Mayor John Hamilton

City Aggressively Pursues Solar Energy With Solarize Bloomington Phase Two

Updated August 1, 2017 7:04 AM

(BLOOMINGTON) - On Monday, Bloomington Mayor Hamilton launched the City's most ambitious solar measures to date as he challenged the City to increase its solar capacity by five megawatts and encouraged the public with a one megawatt goal.

"Today, I'm proud to announce aggressive measures that the City of Bloomington will be taking over the next five months to expand our solar footprint, and to encourage others to follow suit," Mayor Hamilton stated. "The people and institutions of our city spent ten years installing one megawatt of solar power. I'm challenging our city to add five megawatts of power by the end of this year, and I'm asking the public to generate one more megawatt."

The addition of five megawatts would increase the City's solar capacity by sevenfold to produce 14% of the government's electricity use and over 9% of the City's overall energy consumption, numbers that will likely increase upon the completion of efficiency projects currently underway.

The mayor addressed Senate Bill 309, a bill that removed a major incentive to going solar by drastically limiting net metering, which allows solar homes to sell their excess electricity back to the grid for their neighbors to use, and to earn retail rates as credit. Signed on July 1, the bill grandfathers in solar systems existing as of December 31, 2017 so that owners continue to receive the same incentives and economic value for 30 years. "With the December 31st deadline imposed by the state, we are in a race to solarize Bloomington," the mayor stated. "The City is just like a resident. We have until December 31st to be locked into those better rates, which gives us a challenge: how much solar can we install in the next 5 months?" The mayor directed City government to pursue 5 megawatts in new capacity at 29 buildings and locations.

Beyond all the solar installations on City facilities, the mayor also encourages households to do more. In order to acquire as much solar as possible prior to the December 31 deadline, Phase Two of Solarize Bloomington reaches out to residents in the whole region. To date in Phase Two, 140 households have expressed interest in the project, and over 100 residents have attended the first two informational sessions.

The City launched the initial phase of Solarize Bloomington in January by reaching out to encourage Monroe County residents to consider rooftop solar. The City offered training and wholesale pricing on solar panels as part of its acquisition program, and nearly 100 households installed solar systems thanks to Phase One initiatives. "Thus far, over 600 kilowatts of solar energy have been installed. I'm hoping that we can grow that to 1 megawatt by the end of the year," the mayor said.

AEP proposes $4.5B to buy 2 GW Oklahoma wind farm

Posted by Laura Arnold  /   July 27, 2017  /   Posted in wind  /   No Comments

AEP proposes $4.5B to buy 2 GW Oklahoma wind farm

Dive Brief:

  • Invenergy and GE Renewables, a unit of General Electric, announced they are constructing a 2,000 MW wind farm in Oklahoma as part of the so-called Wind Catcher Energy Connection project.
  • American Electric Power (AEP) has asked regulators in Louisiana, Texas, Arkansas and Oklahoma for permission to purchase the $4.5 billion wind facility outright instead of through a standard power purchase agreement for the output. The project also includes a high voltage, 350-mile transmission line, key to shipping the output to customers in the South and lower Midwest.
  • The project is one of the biggest wind farms under construction in the United States and is scheduled to be completed in 2020. For comparison, the Wyoming Chokecherry-Sierra Madre wind farm is expected to boast a nameplate capacity of 3,000 MW, and construction started near the end of last year.

Dive Insight:

More utilities are eyeing investments in wind farms to boost renewable energy in their power mixes. However, AEP appears to be veering slightly off the normal course of signing a PPA contract with the developer, and instead wants to purchase the assets outright.

Bloomberg notes a trend of utilities trying to purchase these facilities and recover costs instead of buying the output from the developer through a contract, especially as solar and wind costs decline and compete with natural gas and coal.

A recent levelized cost of energy analyses from Lazard said onshore wind LCOE is between $32/MWh and $62/MWh—lower than that of a combined cycle natural gas plant, which ranges from $48/MWh to $78/MWh.

This wind facility is one of the most ambitious ones to date in the United States. At 2,000 MW, it would serve 1.1 million customers under AEP subsidiaries Public Service Co. of Oklahoma and Southwestern Electric Power Co. The project is expected to save those customers $7 billion in net costs over a 25-year span, according to a joint press release from GE Energy and . In addition, AEP estimates 4,000 direct jobs will be created through construction, along with 80 permanent job once the facility is operational.

About 9,000 MW of wind energy came online last year, according to the U.S. Energy Information Administration, beating hydropower as the largest installed base capacity for renewable energy. Much of that installed capacity is centered in Texas, but Oklahoma has long been prime territory for wind. The state recently prematurely sunsetted a state wind credit due to the high volume of wind energy buildout.

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Opinion: Climate change will heat up midterm elections

Posted by Laura Arnold  /   July 25, 2017  /   Posted in 2018 Midterm Elections, Uncategorized  /   No Comments

Climate change will heat up midterm elections

Renewable energy contract case in Michigan could set precedent

Posted by Laura Arnold  /   July 24, 2017  /   Posted in Uncategorized  /   No Comments

Renewable energy contract case in Michigan could set precedent

Michigan Public Service Commission expected to rule July 31

Illinois issues RFP for utility-scale and brownfield solar

Posted by Laura Arnold  /   July 24, 2017  /   Posted in solar, wind  /   No Comments

Harvest Energy

Illinois issues RFP for utility-scale and brownfield solar

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