What does the Ohio net metering fight mean for Indiana? Is this a sign of what might happen in Indiana? Other states?

Posted by Laura Arnold  /   August 04, 2014  /   Posted in Uncategorized  /   No Comments
Editor's note: A comparison of what is happening in Ohio on net metering is not an apple to apple comparison to the issue in Indiana. Nonetheless, I still think it is important to see what AEP, the parent company of Indiana Michigan Power (I&M), Duke Energy and AES operating subsidiary Dayton Power & Light are doing on the issue of net metering. IPL is also an operating subsidiary of AES.

As described in the article below:

Because of a 1999 deregulation law in Ohio, customers have a choice of which company provides their electricity. Electric distribution utilities are still regulated monopolies, however.

Different than the situation in Ohio, Indiana electric utilities remain fully regulated monopolies with protected exclusive service territories. Although this might be challenged or changed in the future, the attack on net metering in Ohio is likely different than anything we might encounter here in Indiana.

In the meantime, we will follow these developments not just because of the potential impact on Indiana but also because some IndianaDG members are doing business in the Buckeye State.

Laura Ann Arnold, President, IndianaDG

Ohio utilities take net metering fight to state Supreme Court

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Ohio customers' electric bills have two main parts: distribution and generation. Image by Kathiann M. Kowalski.

Ohio customers’ electric bills have two main parts: distribution and generation. Image by Kathiann M. Kowalski.

A case going before the Ohio Supreme Court could have a major impact on distributed generation in the state, while raising questions about corporate separation and possible conflicts of interest for regulated utilities.

The Public Utilities Commission of Ohio recently confirmed that net-metering customers are entitled to the full value of the electricity they feed back into the grid from renewable energy and other distributed generation technologies.

However, FirstEnergy and American Electric Power’s Ohio utilities are trying to reduce the amounts customers will get for that excess electricity. The utilities, along with Dayton Power & Light and Duke Energy, also raised other objections to the rules.

On July 23 the PUCO denied FirstEnergy’s third request for rehearing. AEP’s Ohio Power Company has already appealed the case to the Supreme Court of Ohio. FirstEnergy has not yet announced whether it will appeal as well.

Power in and power out

Net metering is a way for customers who produce some or all of their power to avoid overcharges for electricity they do not need. Those customer-generators may have solar panels, wind turbines, certain types of combined heat and power systems, or other types of on-site generation.

Net metering also provides a way for those customers to get compensation for any excess electricity they feed into the grid. In those cases, Ohio law says customers are entitled to the value of “that electricity.”

The big question in the PUCO case is what that value is.

Because of a 1999 deregulation law in Ohio, customers have a choice of which company provides their electricity. Electric distribution utilities are still regulated monopolies, however.

The regulated utility handles all the billing, but customers’ bills have two main parts: distribution and generation.

Distribution includes the equipment and work the utility does to carry and deliver electricity to its customers.

The other main part of customers’ bills covers electricity generation. If the utility is not the generation provider, it transmits payment to the electrical services company.

The PUCO’s recent decision holds that customers who provide excess electricity to the grid are entitled to the full value that would be charged under the electricity part of their bills.

Most of that charge depends on the market value of energy, which fluctuates. The rate also reflects a fixed “capacity” price, which is determined from annual auctions by the grid operator, PJM.

“It’s about 15 percent of the generation portion of the customer’s electric bill,” said FirstEnergy spokesperson Doug Colafella.

The utilities say customers producing excess electricity should only get the energy part of the electricity rate, and nothing for capacity. That’s how things have been handled so far, Colafella said. “We’re saying let’s follow the original rules that were put in place.”

“If a customer generates excess power, essentially they would be credited just for the energy that they produced and didn’t need,” Colafella explained. Including capacity would require larger payments.

“The PUCO is now saying that we would have to credit that kind of customer an average of about 15 percent more,” Colafella observed.

Utility company filings cite a 2002 Ohio Supreme Court case, which held that customers providing excess electricity to the grid should not get reimbursed for amounts covered by the distribution portion of the bill.

“The court stated that the net-metered customer did not contribute to the cost of PIPP [low-income support] charges, transmission, distribution, etc.,” explained Dan Sawmiller at the Sierra Club’s Beyond Coal campaign. “Inasmuch as the Court holding said that customers were entitled to the full generation rate, that would include capacity and energy.”

The PUCO said that its rulemaking decision complies with both the 2002 court case and the Ohio statute.

“[E]lectricity supplied to a customer-generator includes components such as capacity, demand, and energy,” the PUCO wrote. Its July decision confirmed rulings on the issue inJanuary and May.

The PUCO also noted that Ohio law bars utilities from charging higher retail rates to net-metering customers than they would pay without their own generation.

Not compensating for part of the electricity charge could result in a different rate.

“The net metering rules require utilities to provide net metered customers compensation for electricity delivered to the grid at the same price that the utility would charge (including capacity and energy) for delivering electricity to the customer,” said Lawrence Friedeman, Vice President for Regulatory Affairs and Compliance at IGS Energy in Dublin, Ohio. The company promotes the development of distributed generation projects.

“IGS supported the Commission’s net metering rules because they provide reasonable compensation to distributed generation resources and enable them to compete on more level footing with traditional power plants,” Friedeman said.

Encouraging distributed generation with reasonable compensation for electricity going into the grid is “good public policy,” Friedeman stressed. “Distributed generation projects are on-site, reliable and local, energy efficient, and are cleaner than traditional power plants. “

Potential windfalls

Both camps in the net metering dispute see the other side gaining an unfair advantage if their position prevails.

“For most customer-generators there is no way to ascertain whether they have contributed to a reduction in capacity costs,” Colafella said. “If they don’t provide capacity, they should not be paid for capacity.”

On the flip side, any excess electricity fed into the grid can be sold to other customers. Those other customers would almost certainly pay the full generation rate, without getting any discount for capacity.

“There’s certainly the potential for a windfall” to utilities, said Martin Kushler, a senior fellow at the American Council for an Energy-Efficient Economy (ACEEE).

Conflicts of interest

Indeed, Ohio’s four large electric utilities have unregulated affiliates that sell electricity.

“It creates this very direct conflict of interest,” said Kushler.

The less customers can get for electricity they put into the grid, the longer it takes to pay off the capital costs for their own generation. Less financial incentive to choose those technologies would reinforce demand from existing electricity suppliers.

“This seems to get into even more issues of corporate separation — yet another attempt by an Ohio distribution utility to make its generation affiliate more profitable,” Sawmiller agreed.

Similar reasoning explains why FirstEnergy and other utilities supported the recent rollback of Ohio’s energy efficiency standard, Kushler said. “Arguably, at least under traditional regulation, the utility would have some obligation to minimize costs to their customers.”

However, that’s not what happened with Ohio Senate Bill 310, he says. The new law, signed by Governor John Kasich in June, freezes the renewable energy and energy efficiency standards for two years and then scales them back significantly.

“Energy efficiency was saving electricity at about 2 cents a kilowatt-hour — far cheaper than any source of supply — and yet the vested interests were successful in decimating Ohio’s energy efficiency policy,” Kushler said.

So far, three of Ohio’s four electric distribution utilities have said their energy programs will continue for at least part of the freeze period under SB 310. FirstEnergy is the exception.

“At this point we have not made any decision as to whether we’re going to make any changes to our current plan,” Colafella said.

“I would be totally shocked if they do anything but cancel those programs,” said Rob Kelter, an attorney with the Environmental Law and Policy Center. “It would negatively affect FirstEnergy customers, but it would help their unregulated affiliate sell more electricity.”

Meanwhile, on the federal level, FirstEnergy’s ongoing FERC challenge aims to exclude demand response from the results of May’s capacity auction for 2017-2018.

“We believe that removing these demand resources from the capacity market is going to provide vital compensation for essential physical assets like nuclear, coal, [and] gas base load plants,” Colafella said. “It’s going to help foster properly functioning capacity markets.”

“Demand response presents absolutely zero reliability concerns,” Sawmiller noted. “It won’t freeze like a coal plant did during the polar vortex. In addition, it’s incredibly cheap. This applies downward pressure to capacity prices, lowering electric bills for all customers.”

“If FirstEnergy is able to reduce the amount of demand response that goes into these auctions, it will raise prices for customers,” Sawmiller added.

“Having demand response bid in lowers the price for all the generators that bid in,” Kushler agreed. Conversely, keeping demand response out would raise the auction’s closing price. In Kushler’s view, FirstEnergy’s attempt to exclude it is yet another “classic conflict of interest.”

ACEEE, the Sierra Club, and the Environmental Law & Policy Center are members of RE-AMP, which publishes Midwest Energy News.

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