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Nevada improves RPS with cap removal, but penalties
weakened
On May 8, the Nevada
Public Utilities Commission (PUC) eliminated a 1/2 mill ($0.0005) cap
on retail utility rates that had threatened a 5 percent solar
component of a renewable portfolio standard passed by the state
legislature in May 2001.
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© Rex Windom/US DOE/NREL |
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Uncapped: Removal of caps on utility rates could be
good news for solar in Nevada, like this 16 kW Schott
APC system at the Desert Research Institute in Las
Vegas. |
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The PUC had instituted the
cap in December; the state's Legislative Commission reaffirmed the
solar component by rejecting the cap and sending it back to the PUC
for review in January (see PI 2/2002, p. 20).
But in addition to cap removal, the PUC also ruled that the state's
two utilities, Nevada Power and Sierra Pacific Power Company (SPPC),
won't be penalized if they lag in meeting renewable energy targets for
2003 and 2004. As the law now stands, they are required to generate 5
percent of electricity sold to retail customers from renewable sources
by 2003, increasing to 15 percent by 2015. The PUC's revised ruling
was scheduled to go back to the Legislative Commission on May 31 for
further review. If approved, it is uncertain how or if the utilities
will make up their quotas later. Robert Cooper, senior regulatory
analyst in the state's Bureau of Consumer Protection, points out that
a PUC regulation written two days after the ruling provides for a »fine or other administrative action« for non-compliance.
»The 'other
action' presumably includes making up the missing amount of
[electricity generated from] renewable energy,« he says.
The utilities are being tight-lipped about bids that have been
received for solar installations. SPPC's Colin Duncan says all of the
information »is being retained as confidential by the utility.«
William P.
Hirshman
© PHOTON International, June 2002
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