Legal Options for Renewable Energy

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Knowing your legal options when it comes to renewable energy is key to understanding ownership.
Knowing your legal options when it comes to renewable energy is key to understanding ownership.
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Power from the People by Greg Pahl book cover.
Power from the People by Greg Pahl book cover.

Power from the People (Chelsea Green Publishing, 2012) explores how homeowners, co-ops, nonprofit institutions, governments, and businesses are putting power in the hands of local communities through distributed energy programs and energy-efficiency measures. Over 90 percent of US power generation comes from large, centralized, highly polluting, nonrenewable sources of energy. It is delivered through long, brittle transmission lines, and then is squandered through inefficiency and waste. But it doesn’t have to be that way. Communities can indeed produce their own local, renewable energy. 

Because community-supported energy is a relatively new idea in the United States, the legal and other structures to support it are still, to some extent, works in progress. Nevertheless, there are a number of traditional (and a few not-so-traditional) ways of approaching ownership and development models for local energy projects. For most community renewable energy projects, some form of joint ownership makes sense.

Existing Local Public Entity

In some cases, depending on local circumstances, the simplest approach might be to go with an existing local public entity rather than take the time and expense to create a new one. Towns and school districts in most locations can develop renewable energy initiatives, and this is the ownership strategy many communities follow with their first project(s). For wind, solar PV, hydro, and other projects that generate electricity, any excess power may be sold to the grid through net metering. Financing for municipal projects might be accomplished with CREBs. Many entities eligible for CREBs might also qualify for REPI, although it’s not clear whether both programs could be used for the same project.

A relatively new legal option available in seven states, Community Choice Aggregation (CCA), provides an alternative and in some ways simpler route for utilizing public entities to exert more control over the power the community consumes—but without actually owning the plant and transmission infrastructure. Through CCA, a group of local governments can aggregate the demand of their respective communities (the residential and business ratepayers, as well as government institutions) and then select and purchase energy at superior terms on their behalf. “The reasons to pursue CCA vary by community,” says Shawn Marshall of the Marin Energy Authority, California’s first CCA program, “but chief among them are lower electricity costs, cleaner energy supply, greenhouse gas reduction benefits, and the development of local generation assets.”

  • Published on Feb 27, 2018
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