NV Energy Unveils Massive Solar, Storage Plans

NV Energy

By Frank Andorka, Senior Correspondent

NV Energy, Nevada’s largest utility, unveiled plans to add more than 1 GW of solar power and at least 100 MW of battery storage in its latest Integrated Resources Plan (IRP), filed today with the Public Utilities Commission of Nevada (PUCN).

The new projects will be evenly distributed throughout the state, with three new plants located in the north and three located in the south, pending the plan’s approval by the PUCN.

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“The six new projects position NV Energy to keep its commitment to double renewable energy by 2023 and, importantly, by diversifying our state’s electricity generation portfolio, will reduce the costs to serve customers,” said Paul Caudill, NV Energy’s CEO. “These projects also represent a step forward in the company’s long-term goal of serving Nevada customers with 100 percent renewable energy.”

NV Energy’s filing with the PUCN represents the first time the utility has included energy storage in a filing, representing a significant shift in thinking for NV Energy and is reflective of a tectonic shift going on throughout the industry. More public utility regulators, in California and New Mexico, for example, are requiring utilities to include energy storage in the IRPs.

100 MW/400 MWh of storage, given the enormous amount of solar that is being added, seems like a modest goal, and it’s logical to assume that number will increase as installations proceed. The plan as outlined in the company’s release appears to be a classic “underpromise/overdeliver” scenario.

All the projects are expected to be completed and operational by 2021. NV Energy plans to employ more than 1,700 construction workers, including union craftsman per a stipulation in the IRP. Approximately 80 new long-term, permanent jobs will be created.

A 300 MW project on tribal land is largest single project in the new portfolio. The partnership between 8minutenergy Renewables, NV Energy and Moapa Band of Paiutes will be built on the Moapa River Indian Reservation about 30 miles north of Las Vegas.

No New Natural Gas Plants For Vistra, Dominion, As Solar Soars, Reuters Reports

Vistra

By Frank Andorka, Senior Correspondent

Solar’s continued ascendancy – now reaching nearly 2% of all electrical generation in the United States – is coming at the expense of combined-cycle natural gas plants.

Two of the nation’s largest utilities – Dominion Energy and Vistra Energy Corp. have announced they will no longer build natural gas plants because the underlying economic case for them is disappearing in solar’s shadow, Reuters reported late last week.

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Vistra and Dominion are only the latest utilities to bow to the new electrical-generation reality. In states like California, Arizona and New Mexico, public utilities commissions are increasingly skeptical of the need for natural gas plants as “baseload power sources.” Instead, they are insisting utilities begin the process of transforming power generation mixes to include renewable energy + storage instead.

As the price for utility-scale solar continues its downward trend, the need for more expensive natural gas peaker plants is disappearing. It’s having a real effect on the producers of natural gas plant component providers like GE Power and Siemens.

As Reuters reported:

This bearish view of fossil-fuel energy, reflective of a growing acceptance by utilities of renewable power sources, poses a hurdle to John Flannery’s plan to turn around General Electric Co’s (GE.N) $35 billion-a-year power unit.

Dominion’s plans are particularly aggressive. From Reuters:

In Virginia, Dominion Energy ended several maintenance contracts it had with GE this year when it mothballed a large gas-fired plant built by companies GE later acquired and idled seven other coal and natural gas units in the state.

Dominion aims to build 4,720 megawatts of solar by 2033, the equivalent of about five large combined-cycle power plants.

It is opening a new combined-cycle natural-gas plant in Virginia this year, built with GE and Mitsubishi equipment. It said it has no current plans to build more such plants.

“Solar is very cheap,” spokesman Dan Genest said. “These units were just not cutting it.”

As SolarWakeup has reported, some experts are predicting the natural gas boom that had been anticipated as utilities transitioned to renewable power may no longer be a reality.

More:

General Electric’s power unit fights for growth as wind, solar gain (Reuters)

Renewables, FTW! Price Drops Send Natural Gas Reeling (SolarWakeup)

Will Natural Gas Lose Its Place As A Transition Energy? (SolarWakeup)

Natural Gas Plans Hit Snag For Arizona Utility (SolarWakeup)

The Tariffs Are Taking A Devastating Toll

By Tony Clifford, CDO of Standard Solar

As a general rule, it doesn’t hurt to be right—but when it comes to the devastating effects the Section 201 solar tariffs are having on the industry, I wish I’d been wrong.

Last year, two foreign-owned companies held the U.S. solar industry hostage to their own selfish needs, and 9,800 people lost their jobs in 2017 alone. And I have to be blunt: 2018 has not gotten off to any better start.

I’ve heard some so-called industry “experts” suggest the tariffs are having the desired effect, i.e. that solar manufacturing jobs are coming back to the United States. They point to a handful of companies that say they’re expanding their module factories and one new factory planned in Jacksonville, Florida, as evidence.

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But as one industry commentator pointed out, the number of jobs gained in the expansions are nowhere near what they’d need to be to make up for the losses. And those who were counting on the Jacksonville factory to make up the difference…well, I’ve got some bad news for you.

The number of jobs that factory is now supposed to be half of what the company had originally pledged (400 vs. 800), and the financial investment isn’t anywhere near the amount of money originally envisioned.

Meanwhile, elsewhere in the industry, jobs are still being lost. So far this year, we’ve seen some installation companies laying off employees by the hundreds, and one major racking manufacturer is closing its U.S. operations (in that case, the tariffs were just the fatal blow to a company already suffering from other financial strains, but without the tariffs, I believe they might have survived).

And here’s the infuriating irony: Those two foreign-owned firms for whom the entire industry held its collective breath as their trade complaint made its way through the process, ostensibly so those two companies could survive and advance?

One company was recently purchased by its well-capitalized competitor, and the other—about which I warned you innumerable times last year—is being sold off for parts (literally) by its rapacious largest creditor.

So one wonders if there might have been ulterior motives there after all. Personally, I think the trade complaint was filed primarily to boost valuations for both of the companies in question. As a result, the executives at both may walk away with impressive golden parachutes while the remains of those companies burn to ashes.

Oh, and by the way, no new jobs will be created at either (though in the one case, the sale might mean the 300 employees at its manufacturing plant might keep their jobs so, you know, small victories and all that).

All of this is to say that when I called last year’s trade complaint destructive and devastating, I wasn’t kidding. And though I currently look like some sort of doomsday Nostradamus, there is possibly light at the end of the tunnel—a national bill to remove the tariffs is currently pending before Congress. But it’s something that’s going to take all of us fighting as hard as we ever have to bring that light to the industry.

Fortunately, the solar industry has been in fights like this before and won, so I have no doubt we can win this one, too. It’s time to pick up the phone and start making calls—the battle is too important to your livelihoods to stand idly by and do nothing.

Nevada Solar Soars After Legislators Got It Right (After The PUC Got It So Wrong)

By Frank Andorka, Senior Correspondent

What Happened:A recent Vote Solar note on Nevada revealed that the industry has come roaring back after legislative fixes in 2017 cleaned up the mess that lawmakers and the Public Utilities Commission created in 2016.

  • Most specifically, Assembly Bill (AB) 405 went into law and caused applications for NV Energy’s SolarGenerations program to spike 11-fold in just one year.
  • The bill also provided the right atmosphere to encourage solar installers to hire more workers, including one company that increased its workforce 300%.
  • Nevada

    Once state legislators stopped gambling with the future of solar in the state, Nevada’s industry has come roaring back.

    SolarWakeup’s View:  Well, better late than never, right?

    After the Nevada Public Utilities Commission threw the state’s solar market into disarray with its precipitous decision to eliminate net metering in 2016, the rooftop solar industry all but stopped in the state. National companies like Vivint, Sunrun and (then) SolarCity fled the market in protest.

    Two years later, advocacy group Vote Solar says legislative fixes have helped the industry rebound and thrive once again.

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    As Rosalind Jackson of Vote solar writes:

    (NV Energy’s) SolarGenerations applications went from 287 in 2016 to 3,308 in 2017, with most applications coming in the second half of the year, after AB405 was signed into law. This represents an 11-fold year-over-year increase and early monthly data from 2018 indicates continued growth.

    Perhaps the best news from Vote Solar’s note is the reports of significant hiring in a state that needs jobs. Here’s what Larry Cohen, branch manager for Sunrun, a national solar installation firm with offices in Las Vegas, told Jackson:

    Before the ink was dry on AB 405 – Nevada’s landmark Solar Bill of Rights – I started rehiring dozens of our workers who I was forced to lay off just 18 months earlier because of anti-solar net metering changes. We hope legislators across the country look to Nevada and see that there is incredible voter demand for solar choice. All states should take strong steps to protect access to clean, affordable local energy.

    It’s a great thing to see the state with some of the highest insolation rates in the country getting its act together again on solar. Other states should see Nevada’s lost two years as a cautionary tale against changing solar policy recklessly without looking at all of the potential cosequences.

    Like I said, better late than never – but those are two years of growth that Nevada solar industry won’t ever get back. And that’s a shame.

    More:

    Nevada Solar Applications Through the Roof Following Passage of Net Metering Bill