I was intrigued yesterday when I read the SEPA blog for the first time of many that day. First reaction, SEPA put in writing exactly what we expected. They are pro-solar and pro-growth but also pro-utility. Utilities like solar in 2 cases, when they get to invest in it in 49 States they don’t operate in and as utility owned generation (UOG, remember this term) at home. Today is the time for SEIA to make their statement. SEIA has yet to sign the Solar Pledge, some State chapters have, but national SEIA has not. Today is the day that SEIA has to decide that they believe in the non-SEPA version of net metering, fair and open for ALL participants without preferential treatment for any incumbent parties.
News
- GTM: How Arizona’s Property Tax Ruling Will Affect State Solar Prices
- PlanetSave: Solar Leasing To Lose Ground To Solar Ownership In 2015
- Motley Fool: Solar Grew 33% in 2013, and There’s Plenty of Room to Run
- RE World: China Becomes World’s Largest PV Market
- CleanTechnica: Renewables Save Fortune 500 Companies Over $1 Billion
- Forbes: The Rise of Big Solar In Chile
- Think Progress: Investment In Clean Energy Could Spur A $12 Billion Market
- CO Independent: Controversial utility commission appointee never confirmed
Opinions
Have a great day!
Yann