Dear John,
Everyone knows that accelerating solar energy has overwhelmingly strong public support. ELPC and our environmental partners know it. Politicians know it from their polling. Utilities know it from their polling, too.
Ameren, which is Illinois’ second-largest electric utility, appears to have missed that memo. Or, perhaps, just doesn’t seem to care enough. Ameren has been attempting to put up regulatory barriers to rooftop solar, which ELPC’s clean energy team must then bat down before the Illinois Commerce Commission. These sorts of legally and technically complicated cases before state public utility regulatory commissions is where the “rubber hits the road” to achieve policies that promote, instead of regulatory barriers that impede, solar energy development.
It can’t be that Ameren is so hard-pressed for cash – Ameren has raised its dividend payout three times in just 15 months: once in December 2019, again in December 2020, and now again for March 2021. About a 16% dividend boost in total.
In the meantime, Ameren is trying to restrict economic “net metering” treatment for Illinois ratepayers to deter more rooftop solar projects.
Here’s how net metering works: when a building owner’s solar panels produce more electricity on a sunny day than the home, school or business is using, that extra electricity generation goes to the grid to help supply power to other Ameren customers. This is especially valuable power on a hot, sunny summer day when electricity demand is highest or when supplies are otherwise tight. More grid support, more reliability—benefiting all Ameren customers.
Net metering essentially means that the solar homeowner’s meter runs in both directions. So, if you generate more electricity from solar panels than you use on Monday, but less electricity than you use on Tuesday, that nets out at the same price. That’s fair.
Illinois’ net metering law is designed to spur solar energy investment and provide fair rate treatment. Once distributed solar generation makes up 5% of Ameren’s overall customer electricity load, however, the utility can then switch to a different compensation plan based on solar energy generation’s value to the grid.
Ameren tried to use some fuzzy math to jump the gun in declaring that it reached that 5% benchmark in order to prematurely cut off net metering and replace it with an inadequate rebate. ELPC attorneys Nikhil Vijaykar and Brad Klein, and our clean energy allies, fought back and won before the Illinois Commerce Commission.
In December, the Commissioners voted 4-1 in ruling that Ameren’s methodology was incorrect. The 5% benchmark for retail net metering is now estimated to be about two years from now. Ameren filed an appeal, and ELPC attorneys will be before the Illinois Appellate Court to uphold the Commission’s Order and keep solar projects moving forward in Illinois.
Ameren is also trying to hold down solar by urging the Commission to adopt a flawed compensation plan that’s not fair or aligned with Illinois’ growing solar market and overall clean energy goals. The ELPC team is fighting back again to get fair and effective solar energy valuation policies in place.
Local, rooftop solar and community-based solar energy projects benefit everyone. Developing solar energy and making it work in all communities helps families save money on utility bills, creates local jobs and investments, and promotes healthier air for all to breathe. Ameren’s “back to the past” approach to solar would deny these benefits to many people and businesses in central and southern Illinois.
ELPC’s clean energy advocates are winning the battles so far against Ameren. Let’s keep working together to win this solar war that should not have to be fought. Come on Ameren, step up to support rooftop and community solar projects for all.
Here’s some more ELPC news this week:
ELPC’s New Federal Court Lawsuit to Protect Public Lands: Upper Mississippi River National Wildlife and Fish Refuge, which is the gem of these vital conservation areas in the Midwest, and the fourth most visited wildlife refuge in the nation. The Refuge was established in 1924 and protects robust habitats for fish and wildlife, and is an important migratory bird stopping and breeding place on the Mississippi Flyway. National Wildlife Refuges and other public lands that serve important conservation purposes should be protected – it should not be treated as an available place open for high-voltage transmission lines, pipelines, and other major development. We filed this lawsuit in the U.S. District Court for the Western District of Wisconsin.
ELPC public interest attorneys are co-representing four conservation groups – the National Wildlife Refuge Association, Driftless Area Land Conservancy, Wisconsin Wildlife Federation and Defenders of Wildlife – in this new lawsuit against the Rural Utilities Service for violating the National Environmental Protection Act, and the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service for violating the National Wildlife Refuge System Improvement Act in approving the Cardinal-Hickory Creek high-voltage transmission line. See our press release and media coverage on this important case in the Wisconsin State Journal and the Milwaukee Journal Sentinel. The case is filed in the U.S. District Court for the Western District of Wisconsin.
Bad News: Michigan ALJ Denies Climate Change Considerations in Line 5 Oil Pipeline Tunnel Permit Hearing: Michigan Administrative Law Judge Dennis Mack ruled that climate change considerations cannot be considered in Enbridge’s Line 5 permit hearing before the Michigan Public Service Commission. ELPC and the Michigan Climate Action Network will appeal this ruling as we contend that Michigan law allows us to make the case that the climate change impacts of the Line 5 oil pipeline tunnel are significant, harmful and must be considered in a meaningful environmental review of Enbridge’s siting permit request to the Commission. Read our statement here.
ELPC is working effectively to accelerate clean renewable energy that is a vital climate change solution, and to protect the special wild and natural places for all to enjoy. Thank you for joining ELPC to make a difference for people, our communities and the planet.
Best Wishes,
Howard A. Learner
Executive Director
Environmental Law & Policy Center
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