Category Archives: energy savings

PUC approve new costs for solar owners

California utility regulators narrowly passed new rules that will increase costs for owners of rooftop solar systems, part of a broad reshaping of the state’s energy future.

The California Public Utilities Commission, on a three-two vote, stopped short Thursday of the even higher charges that the state’s investor-owned utilities wanted.

The opposing commissioners said they voted against the proposal because of the last-minute elimination of an electricity transmission fee, a move that they said made the overall arrangement too rich for the solar industry.

The decision, which initially applies only to new solar panel systems, was viewed by some as a compromise. But others say it’s a defeat for the utilities.

Southern California Edison, San Diego Gas & Electric and Pacific Gas & Electric had pressed the commission to charge solar owners hefty fees that the solar industry said would crush their business.

By Edison’s account, the average solar customer under the current structure has a monthly electric bill of about $82. Under the commission’s decision, that would increase to $91. A utility counterproposal would have increased it to $103.

read more at: http://www.sandiegouniontribune.com/news/2016/jan/28/ca-approves-new-costs-solar-owners/

California Adds Electrical Vehicle Incentives

car

California’s plug-in electric vehicle drivers are about to get new financial perks.

Members of the California Public Utilities Commission are scheduled to sign off today on guidelines for an annual credit against utility bills or a one-time vehicle rebate. The commission will let individual utilities decide which incentive to offer.

Southern California Edison is proposing a one-time rebate of $250 to $350 per new vehicle owner.

San Diego Gas & Electric intends to provide an annual bill credit but declined to say how much.  “We just don’t have any specific numbers at this point. It’s too early,” said Erin Coller, an SDG&E spokeswoman. “The numbers are not available right now.”

read more at: http://www.utsandiego.com/news/2014/dec/18/electric-vehicles-get-new-perk/

disclaimer: for entertainment and information purposes only

SDG&E Latest Price Scheme

Today, pricing is divided into four tiers, with rates rising steeply as a household uses more power over the course of a month.

The utility’s proposal would create two tiers with less severe price jumps.

If your power bill is really high, the proposal would cut it substantially, with rates falling 30 percent in the top tiers. If you’re an energy miser like me, you’re in for a modest shock, with rates rising 8 percent in lower tiers.

Environmentalists should hate this idea, because it waters down incentives to conserve. And it cuts into a big advantage for people who install solar panels on their homes to escape the high-priced, upper tiers.

But fair is fair. When you’re regulating a monopoly, the closer a rate system gets to allocating costs equally among customers, the better it is.

There is one caveat. SDG&E’s plan would introduce a fixed fee applying to everybody. This unduly discourages thrift for no good economic reason.

Utility executives argue that fixed fees would help fairly spread the fixed costs of their vast network of wires, transformers and other essential equipment.

Yet Chevron somehow manages to recover much larger fixed costs from consumers each time we stop at the gas station. It’s hard to see how there’s anything fairer than paying your way, one gallon or kilowatt-hour at a time.

This utility proposal for a fixed charge is more correctly viewed as politically deft attempt to improve fairness for people without rooftop solar systems. Under current regulations, solar owners get to sell their power into the grid at the full retail price, offsetting their costs at night when they pull electricity into their homes.

Read more at: http://www.utsandiego.com/news/2014/nov/19/utility-rate-idea-fair-rooftop-solar-would-suffer/

Disclaimer: for information and entertainment purposes only