The Corporate Voice. Issues like divestment and ESG are driven by the expansion of the bottom line. It may lack the progressive do better component but in most cases, especially in corporate world, the alignment of higher earnings, better talent and larger markets with lower risk with climate related focus is driving the corporate agenda. Renewables and the broader energy transition has become a reality because solar, wind and resilience has become a more attractive investment for capital, a trillion dollar market that didn’t exist previously. That is why the lobbying done on behalf of our industries isn’t solely resting on trade groups’ shoulders, it includes the corporate and capital interests that want the market to expand further while lowering the risk profile. Interestingly, it’s the combination of wall street and corporate America that is making this lobbying focus even stronger.
Why It Matters. Picking winners and losers was the legislative pushback in the early days of solar lobbying. Let the market decide, especially in light of the need for subsidies some 15 years ago, and now the markets have declared renewables the winner and corporates, as customers and investors, are throwing their support behind it full force. Not just the support for policies that enable a better functioning market but also against policies that attempt to hurt the opportunity to compete or limit access to these new sources. The headlines may label this as a ‘woke’ effort to push societal desires but when it comes to renewable energy, the bipartisan support by consumers and voters is loud and clear.
Shifting The Center. One of the topics we covered in yesterday’s market call with Roth Capital was the regulatory fight we often mention on this platform, whether that is NEM 3.0 in California, NEM cap in Michigan or Federal issues. Regulatory proceedings sometimes welcome extreme initial proposals in an effort to draw the boundaries of the argument so far outside of the norm that a settlement would be considered a victory. It is important to see the first overture as an overture but also to reject it outright in most cases with a vigorous fight. I often hear from you saying that things will sort themselves out but they only do when everyone does their part in the process otherwise David cannot take on Goliath.
- Axios: Private equity’s renewable investments hit a record in 2020
- Grist: Lobbying for good? New campaign asks Big Tech to push for bold climate action
- Canary Media: US now ‘halfway to zero’ on electricity-sector carbon emissions
- Utility Dive: Biden budget, infrastructure plan would create standalone storage tax credit
- Solar Builder: Michigan looks to remove 1 percent distributed solar cap (again)
- PV-Tech: Value from co-located solar-storage likely to shift from grid services to energy arbitrage
- Energy Storage News: Time to take virtual power plants seriously – Swell Energy creates asset class from customer assets
- PV-Magazine: NIPSCO brings another 200 MW of solar to Indiana
Opinion
Best, Yann