1 CPUC Responsibilities for Renewable and Energy Efficiency Resource Commitments by Investor-Owned Utilities and Ratepayers Hearing on Public Goods Charge & the Renewable Resources Trust Fund Senate Energy, Utilities and Communications Committee March 29, 2011 Jeanne Clinton, Climate Strategies Manager Molly Tirpak Sterkel, Distributed Generation Programs California Public Utilities Commission (CPUC) Energy Division
Cost Components of Electric Rates
3 3 Electric Public Goods Charge, a surcharge funding: –Electric energy efficiency (EE) –Public interest electric R&D (PIER) Gas Public Purpose Program, a surcharge supporting: –Natural gas energy efficiency (EE) –Public interest gas R&D (PIER) Funds collected through Electric Distribution component supports: –Self-Generation Incentive Program –California Solar Initiative –Low Emission Vehicle Program Funds collected through Natural Gas Distribution component supports: –Self-Generation Incentive Program –California Solar Initiative Thermal program Electricity “Procurement” component (generation and purchased power components of electric rates): –Renewable Portfolio Standard (RPS) electric resource commitments Electric Utilities Collect Program Funds through Various Surcharges, Procurement Expenditures, and Distribution Rates
4 4 Total Authorized 2010 Electric and Gas Revenue Collection for PG&E, SCE, SCG, and SDG&E Electric Energy Efficiency (EE): $ 256 million Natural Gas EE*$175 million Electricity Procurement EE$576 million Self-Generation Incentive Program (SGIP):** $ 83 million California Solar Initiative (CSI) electric:*** $ 217 million CSI Thermal natural gas:*** $ 31 million Renewable Power (Electricity Procurement): AMF not specified; –included in total electricity procurement collections Low Emission Vehicle Program: $ 22 million Electric R&D (PIER): $ 69 million Natural Gas R&D (PIER) $ 24 million * For FY , Legislative action transfers $155 million to State General Fund for non-efficiency purposes ** Approximately 80% electric, 20% gas; 2011 is final year of authorized collections * ** 10-year average for for CSI Electric; 8-year average for CSI Thermal
5 5 Investor-Owned Utility Energy Efficiency Program Commitments for Combined Funding Sources
6 Renewable Projects Allocated “Above Market Funds” from $750 Million of PGC New Renewable Funds Returned from CEC (SEP) Account ( )
7 RPS Procurement Process CPUC approves RPS procurement plans IOUs hold annual solicitation IOU rank bids pursuant to “least-cost, best- fit” methodology Independent evaluator oversees solicitation, bid evaluation, and negotiations Bilateral contracts (negotiated outside of a competitive solicitation) are also eligible IOUs negotiate bids, execute contracts Once the IOU executes contract, submits to the CPUC for approval
8 1,702 MW of new capacity online since 2003* Number of Projects MWGWh/y In-State Out-of-State Total Percentage In-State64%44%34% New 2010 capacity, by region * More projects – over 1,000 MW – have delivered renewable power since 2003 under short-term contracts. CPUC Energy Division generally does not credit the RPS program with having incented the development of these mostly-existing projects.
RPS Procurement by Fuel Type
10 Go Solar California campaign 10 California Public Utilities Commission California Energy Commission Publicly Owned Utilities (POU) Total Program California Solar Initiative (CSI) Programs New Solar Homes Partnership (NSHP) VariousGo Solar California Budget $2,167 million – electric $250 million - gas $400 million$784 million $3,351 million – electric $250 million – gas Solar Goals 1,940 MW – electric 200,000 Solar Hot Water systems - gas 400 MW700 MW ~3,000 MW 200,000 Solar Hot Water systems Scope All solar systems in IOU areas except PV in new homes Solar systems on new homes in IOU territories All solar systems in POU areas All of California SB 1 (Murray, 2006) and AB 1470 (Huffman, 2007) set broad solar goals for CA 3,000 MW of new customer-owned solar DG – electric A self-sustaining solar industry 200,000 solar water heating systems – gas Note: The electric budgets are for , and the gas budgets are for
11 CPUC’s California Solar Initiative (CSI) Budget 11 Program Components: Various program subcomponents fund solar PV and solar thermal (including solar hot water) technologies from IOU electric and gas ratepayers Low-income solar programs serve affordable housing Budget ($ Millions) Goal CSI Electric Budget ( )$2,1671,940 MW General Market Solar Program (includes PV and electric-displacing CSI-Thermal program)$1,8971,750 MW Single-family Affordable Solar Homes (SASH)$108~15 MW Multifamily Affordable Solar Housing (MASH)$108~30 MW Research, Development, Demonstration, and Deployment (RD&D)$50~ CSI Gas Budget ( ) CSI-Thermal Program (Gas-Displacing solar thermal/hot water)$ million therms Total CSI Budget$2,417 Note: CPUC D , FOF 15, p. 28 established goal of the general market program as 1,750 MW. The CPUC decisions on MASH and SASH did not explicitly adopt a 95 MW per program goal; however, the CPUC did adopt a total CSI program goal of 1,940 MW in D In addition, D established the CSI Thermal Program pursuant to AB 1470 and SB 1.
12 CSI Program Incentives decline as demand grows: CPUC General Market Program has a goal of 1,750 MW ¢/kWh $/watt PBI: Paid based on actual output over 5 years EPBB: Paid upfront based on expected output using installation design characteristics CSI has installed 500 MW of new solar PV since CSI has an additional 400 MW of additional projects in the pipeline. CSI program installs more MWs each year with less incentive funding. Average $/watt paid has gone down each year Incentives offered today are mostly in Step 8 at $0.35/watt.
Ratepayer Support as a Percent of System Costs 13 Application Type Ratepayer Funded CSI Rebate Federal Investment Tax Credit (ITC) Average System Cost Residential$0.35$2.39$7.96 Percentage4%30%100% Non-Residential$0.35$2.26$7.42 Percentage5%30%100% Non-Tax Entity$1.100$7.96 Percentage15%0100% Date: January 6, 2011 Average systems are down ~20%+ in 3 yrs (now cost $7.50 to $8.00/watt ). CSI Rebate has reduced faster than system cost, and now covers just 4-5% of system cost, on average. CSI provides other benefits besides rebate: consumer protection, warranty requirements, equipment and performance standards, data transparency. Ratepayer Support as % of System Costs ($/watt)
14 Self-Generation Incentive Program (SGIP) 14 SGIP provides incentives for non-solar Distributed Generation (DG) technologies. Goals of SGIP Reduce peak load demand (historical goal from inception in 2001) Reduce greenhouse gas emissions (per SB 412 in 2009 ) Budget $83 Million program budget per year $75 Million for incentives, $8 Million for program administration Incentive budget split 50% for renewable and 50% for non-renewable Budget allocated across IOUs as % of natural gas sales. No new budget collection allowed after 12/31/2011 per SB 412. SGIP Program authorized to operate through Incentives Offered on a Capacity basis (not Performance) Wind = $1.50/Watt Fuel Cells = $2.50/Watt (+ $2.00/watt if using biogas) Storage = $2.00/Watt + 20% incentive adder for California Suppliers (per AB 2667, 2008) Fuel Cells using biogas with a California Supplier = $5.00/watt
15 SGIP Program Data 15 Technology Complete Active Total No.MW$ MillionNo.MW$ MillionNo.MW$ Million PV $ $ $459 Wind62.4 $ $ $36 Fuel Cell RE106.3 $ $ $193 IC Engine RE179.2 $ $ $12 Microturbine RE183.2 $ $ $5 Gas Turbine RE00.0 $ $ 000.0$0 Fuel Cell Fossil $ $ $41 IC Engine Fossil $ $ $82 Microturbine Fossil $ $ $17 Gas Turbine Fossil $ $ $7 AES00.0 $ $ $13 Total $ $ $865 SGIP Program has completed 1,320 self-generation projects (for 355 MW) Program has an additional 169 pending projects (for 82 MW). SGIP Program Data is shown as cumulative combined statewide totals ( ), and it consist of PG&E and SCE data thru 11/1/2010, SDG&E (CCSE) data through 12/1/2010, and SCG data as of 12/15/2010.