WE Energies to Squash Distributed Renewables with their latest rate case.

Collapse
X
 
  • Time
  • Show
Clear All
new posts
  • Ian S
    Solar Fanatic
    • Sep 2011
    • 1879

    #16
    Originally posted by kwilcox
    All good points. As you hypothesized, we are 2% of the energy mix currently. I'll research the renewable requirement and emphasize this point more. I've been treating it as an intangible benefit against the contention that we don't "pay our fair share of the grid" but it really isn't.
    I think you should also make the point that you've been a victim of bait and switch, where you've invested for a decades-long period and now the rules are being drastically changed. That argument had significant clout in the solar fees debate here in Arizona to the extent that even the utility agreed from the outset with grandfathering existing solar owners. And be sure to call it "bait and switch" because choice of words matter in effective communications - just ask Frank Luntz - neither the utility nor the PUC wants folks to think they support such unfair and unpopular tactics. I realize your getting grandfathered doesn't do anything for new solar owners but looking out for number one seems to be the accepted approach to everything these days. Also, when you're talking grandfathering, make sure that it gets transferred to a new owner at least for some period of time say 20 years in total.

    Comment

    • Sunking
      Solar Fanatic
      • Feb 2010
      • 23301

      #17
      Originally posted by kwilcox
      Thanks for the insult.
      No insult just stating facts.


      Originally posted by kwilcox
      Unfortunately, the investment firm of Morgan Stanley disagrees with your assessment.
      No they don't. They are selling not buying solar stock and buying utility stock. It is called Pump and Dump. They bought up a lot of Solar PV manufactures stock in 2007 to 2009 time frame when solar stocks went bust. Now that most are out of business, stock prices have risen and now they are cashing out and selling off. That is what brokers do, buy low and sell high. They are plucking pigeons. All you gotta do is look at their holdings to see it. Secondly look at utility stocks, they are a rising and paying good dividends. If you want to know what to buy and sell, listen to what Brokers say and do the exact opposite and do what they are doing. Right now they are dumping solar and buying utilities.

      You knew it was a risk when you bought in and this could happen. You got caught holding the bag.
      MSEE, PE

      Comment

      • kwilcox
        Solar Fanatic
        • Jul 2014
        • 136

        #18
        Yes, they do. You didn't even read the Morgan Stanley document did you Sunking? I gave you the docket link, how to find it and everything. You should check cited empirical data before you post. Please do check the Barclays downgrade document too. Grid defection is a real concern when you think 30-50 years out from an infrastructure perspective like any major power company has to do.

        To help you out, I've attached them to this post. Now go read them and then please change the tune of your diatribe to fit the points being made.
        Attached Files
        4KW system featuring Suniva OPT265/Enphase M215

        Comment

        • kwilcox
          Solar Fanatic
          • Jul 2014
          • 136

          #19
          Originally posted by Ian S
          I think you should also make the point that you've been a victim of bait and switch, where you've invested for a decades-long period and now the rules are being drastically changed. That argument had significant clout in the solar fees debate here in Arizona to the extent that even the utility agreed from the outset with grandfathering existing solar owners. And be sure to call it "bait and switch" because choice of words matter in effective communications - just ask Frank Luntz - neither the utility nor the PUC wants folks to think they support such unfair and unpopular tactics. I realize your getting grandfathered doesn't do anything for new solar owners but looking out for number one seems to be the accepted approach to everything these days. Also, when you're talking grandfathering, make sure that it gets transferred to a new owner at least for some period of time say 20 years in total.
          Good point. Interesting to hear that was effective in AZ.
          4KW system featuring Suniva OPT265/Enphase M215

          Comment

          • SunEagle
            Super Moderator
            • Oct 2012
            • 15125

            #20
            Originally posted by kwilcox
            You didn't read the Morgan Stanley document did you Sunking? I gave you the docket link, how to find it and everything. You should check cited empirical data before you post. Please do check the Barclays downgrade document too. Grid defection is a real issue.

            To help you out, I've attached them to this post.
            Seems pretty far fetched to me that Barclays would think a lot of people would go off grid because there "may" be a cheap energy storage system in the next ten years even though there is no low cost battery system that is close to being available anytime in the near future. It is possible they are trying to manipulate the market using this tactic.

            Comment

            • kwilcox
              Solar Fanatic
              • Jul 2014
              • 136

              #21
              Well, as you could see, they did downgrade the entire US electric utility sector in March due to that potential. Isn't market manipulation a crime? Maybe they know something about the Tesla battery factory that we don't? Remember, the energy sector looks 30-50 years out from an investment perspective.

              To tell the truth, I'm not really here to speculate; just cite the data if I decide to discuss hybrid grid defection. I'm liking the AZ "bait & switch " tactic too now. We really did play by their rules only to get threatened by a switch without so much as a grandfather clause...
              4KW system featuring Suniva OPT265/Enphase M215

              Comment

              • russ
                Solar Fanatic
                • Jul 2009
                • 10360

                #22
                Originally posted by kwilcox
                We really did play by their rules only to get threatened by a switch without so much as a grandfather clause...
                Really? You were using rules forced on the utilities by politics - sue the politicians. No one switched anything on anyone in most cases.
                [SIGPIC][/SIGPIC]

                Comment

                • Ian S
                  Solar Fanatic
                  • Sep 2011
                  • 1879

                  #23
                  Originally posted by russ
                  Really? You were using rules forced on the utilities by politics - sue the politicians.
                  That's why I said to present it as bait and switch to the PUC. It worked in Arizona with the Corp. Commission who even grandfathered us from having to pay the tiny $5/month fee they eventually agreed upon. We even got them to modify the grandfathering so that subsequent buyers of our homes would also be grandfathered for a period totalling 20 years from installation. I would suggest the O.P. use the Arizona experience as support for his case. It IS bait and switch when the Corp. Commission and the utility itself extoll the virtues of rooftop solar then turn around and demonize those who actually take them up on the deal. Even the $5 fee has had an effect: solar installs in AZ are down significantly since the fee was instituted.

                  Comment

                  • kwilcox
                    Solar Fanatic
                    • Jul 2014
                    • 136

                    #24
                    Ian S, I'm liking the point you made in AZ more and more because it really does apply in WI too. I'm going to price out an outback system that can handle 11kWh/day, but I suspect that until cheap storage is developed, it'll be a bit more than the $4,400 I have to work with over my array's twenty year lifespan. My arguing the grandfather clause from a current DER owner perspective while leaving the Renew WI lawyers to argue the greater good makes better sense. WE Energies really should grandfather in my CGS8 tariff over 20 years regardless of ownership. If WI didn't want me to build the array, the PSC could have declined to have WE Energies participate in the focus on Energy grant program.
                    4KW system featuring Suniva OPT265/Enphase M215

                    Comment

                    • russ
                      Solar Fanatic
                      • Jul 2009
                      • 10360

                      #25
                      Originally posted by kwilcox
                      I'm going to price out an outback system that can handle 11kWh/day,
                      You are going to argue that "if" you owned a system it should be grandfathered?
                      [SIGPIC][/SIGPIC]

                      Comment

                      • kwilcox
                        Solar Fanatic
                        • Jul 2014
                        • 136

                        #26
                        No. Sorry for the confusion. I'm going to price an Outback system to determine the actual cost of decommissioning my grid tied array and using it instead to power my server farm which draws 11kWh/day. At 4mWh/year its almost a perfect match for my array which can produce 5mWh/year. My solar contractor will do the quote for no charge because the WE Energies rate case, if enacted, will also kill his current solar business. Werner Electric here in WI is an Outback dealer, so we have easy access to product.

                        With empirical data in hand I'll decide whether discussing hybrid grid defection during the October PSC meeting makes sense or not.
                        4KW system featuring Suniva OPT265/Enphase M215

                        Comment

                        • Ian S
                          Solar Fanatic
                          • Sep 2011
                          • 1879

                          #27
                          Originally posted by kwilcox
                          Ian S, I'm liking the point you made in AZ more and more because it really does apply in WI too.
                          I would add that IMHO, if you can get the PUC and utility to accept the concept of grandfathering this time, then it will make it harder to say no grandfathering next time. I'm under no illusion that the battle is over here in Arizona: the November elections will likely see two new members of the Corporation Commission who are in the utility's back pocket and new rate hearings are on the horizon. But at least we have a precedent for grandfathering that should benefit existing solar customers. I suspect that the utility and their minions on the Corp Commission will figure it's easier to let the small cadre of existing solar customers be and work on killing solar for new customers. Oh, except for those the utility itself wants for its own residential rooftop solar program.

                          Comment

                          • ChrisOlson
                            Solar Fanatic
                            • Sep 2013
                            • 630

                            #28
                            Originally posted by kwilcox
                            No. Sorry for the confusion. I'm going to price an Outback system to determine the actual cost
                            kwilcox, you must realize that you are in the business of selling a product when you grid-tie an energy system like solar. We Energies is in the business of making money for their investors. Even though they are a regulated monopoly, investing in the electrical utility business is a guaranteed return and a lucrative investment opportunity. Forcing them to pay more for the product you sell when they can buy it cheaper someplace else is politics interfering with the free market in the name of "green" energy. And we know that never works.

                            You now have an idea of the REAL cost of generating your own electricity with solar. And it's not pretty.

                            This whole grid-tie, net-metering thing is a joke. It was thought up by politicians pushing "green" as a way to get elected because "green" sounds good to the general population. It was never invented, or even needed, by the utility companies. So you are going to be left holding the bag on it. You may not like it, but any system designed by politicians has never worked yet. So that's the way it is. It's just unfortunate that you bought into it.

                            Now you have a better idea of what us off-gridders up here in the north where utility lines don't even go pay for electricity. We never did it to "go green" or save money because most of us could give a hoot less about "green", and are pretty well off in the first place. We did it so we can have the same things you got, that you get a lot cheaper, but that we can control and you can't. If you want to go off-grid with your system, that's your business. But I can tell you from experience that whatever you produce with your solar setup is going to cost you at least 2x what you can buy it for from the utility. And that's why the utility wants nothing to do with it.
                            off-grid in Northern Wisconsin for 14 years

                            Comment

                            • Ian S
                              Solar Fanatic
                              • Sep 2011
                              • 1879

                              #29
                              Originally posted by ChrisOlson
                              Forcing them to pay more for the product you sell when they can buy it cheaper someplace else is politics interfering with the free market in the name of "green" energy.
                              Cry me a river. It's a regulated monopoly so they sometimes have to do something that's not in line with what a free market robber baron would wish. Bait and switch would be one of those things.

                              Comment

                              • kwilcox
                                Solar Fanatic
                                • Jul 2014
                                • 136

                                #30
                                Well, I don't have a better idea yet... The system hasn't been quoted. So at this juncture, I have no idea how much more it will cost. I'm actually interested to find out how much of the cost is storage related. I'm guessing its the majority. How close am I on that guess ChrisOlson?

                                What do you think the cost of storage might be 50 years from now when the world's largest battery plant has been churning out product for 40 years? How might these kind of dynamics change even your personal situation 50 years down the road? Of course you want to see WE Energies win here. It'll help your personal situation greatly I'd imagine. I actually admire people like you who want to cut ties to big energy. I am at odds with you only because I believe that grid based DER is ultimately the way forward for WI. Ironically, I may be taking your very viewpoint at a PSC meeting to prove it.

                                A wise person once told me the following:



                                Some people's perspectives are that I'm in the business of selling product while others believe I'm reducing my electric bill by harvesting sunlight. There can be no more accurate depiction than this over the opinions regarding grid-tie solar.... I don't think anybody is seeing the cylinder above: I believe it is simply this:

                                The sun is always shining somewhere and the wind is always blowing somewhere....
                                4KW system featuring Suniva OPT265/Enphase M215

                                Comment

                                Working...