Regulators are reviewing a proposal that would levy a charge for customers who generate power.
By Paul Koenig
Kennebec Journal news story
HALLOWELL — Around two dozen solar power proponents rallied outside the Maine Public Utility Commission office Wednesday to protest proposed electricity rate changes they say will discourage individuals from investing in renewable energy sources.
Most rally attendees donned yellow “Solar for ME” T-shirts handed out by members of out-of-state advocacy groups before filing into the building for the public hearing on the proposed changes.
Advocates and users of renewable energy – from homeowners with solar panels to larger institutions such as private colleges – have objected to a part of Central Maine Power Co.’s proposed new rate plan that would levy a charge for customers who generate their own power.
CMP also is trying to raise the fixed monthly fees it charges residential and small-business customers, while lowering the variable price.
Both the standby charge for customers using renewable energy sources and the changes to the fixed and variable fees would harm current and future users of solar power, said Fred Greenhalgh from Revision Energy, which has offices in Maine and New Hampshire.
Greenhalgh, who spoke at the rally, said the changes would be unfair to people who have already invested in solar power or other renewable sources and would discourage people from using renewable sources by making the investment less economically feasible.
However, CMP says the standby charges for self-generating users and the fixed and variable charge changes are needed to better reflect the cost of providing and maintaining services to the company’s 610,000 customers.
“This is really a question of fairness for all customers,” said Gail Rice, a CMP spokeswoman, by phone on Wednesday. “When customers self-generate, our costs to serve them does not change, and when they pay less to CMP for their delivery service, other customers have to pay more.”
She said it costs CMP the same to maintain the distribution lines to customers generating their own electricity with solar panels or wind turbines as it does for customers relying entirely on electricity from CMP.
The proposals are being reviewed by the PUC as part of the utility company’s new five-year rate plan that will go through 2019. If approved, the new rates will go into effect July 1, Rice said.
Organizers of Wednesday’s rally are holding another protest before the next PUC public hearing at 7 p.m. Thursday at the University of Southern Maine in Portland.
John Williams, 60, said he and his wife use solar power for their home in Lincolnville and use the electricity generated to charge their Chevy Volt.
He said CMP should increase the usage charge for electricity instead of the fixed monthly fee.
“What they want to do is gonna discourage people from putting solar on their houses and that’s not the right way to go,” Williams said.