WV utilities propose slashing energy credit in half for customers with solar panels

By: Public News Service

Major utilities in West Virginia, Mon Power and Potomac Edison, want to reduce the credit their solar customers get for producing power the utilities use. Critics countered the move would dampen the market for solar in the state.

Net metering is a billing mechanism giving credits to residential and small business owners for excess energy produced by their solar panels, which flows back into the grid. Customers are only billed for the difference between what they use and what they generate, and earned credits can be used to lower monthly costs.

Emmett Pepper, policy director for the nonprofit Energy Efficient West Virginia, said current solar customers would not be affected, but the change would affect people who want to take control of their energy bills.

"The reason that most people want to have solar panels is to save money and this will make it harder to do that," Pepper contended.

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Under utilities’ proposed changes, solar panels could become unaffordable for many West Virginians

By: Mountain State Spotlight

Mike Hedrick never thought he would own solar panels — not because of a lack of interest, but rather the high cost associated with installing the panels on his Pocahontas County home. But when his daughter didn’t use her entire college fund, he saw the opportunity to invest. 

“I just kind of went ahead and done it and just thought that it would help me with my electricity bill because I was planning on retiring,” said Hedrick, 63, who has since then retired from his job at the Green Bank Observatory. 

“So, I just figured I’ll try to do a little bit for the planet — not that I got that type of money to do that — but also help myself,” he added.    

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The Dominion Post: A message to utilities: We aren’t made of money

By: Opinion, The Dominion Post

We understand that under the laws governing power monopolies — sorry, utilities — companies are entitled to recoup their expenses and make a little extra for the shareholders. But the rate hike requests are getting out of hand.

It all kicked off last winter when Mon Power/Potomac Edison/First Energy requested a rate increase because it lost money, ostensibly because it failed to keep enough fuel supply on hand and had to pay extra to get more. The Public Service Commission approved an $11.05 per month rate increase (which we’re paying now). However, it also suggested Mon Power purchase the Pleasants Power Plant.  That, in turn, kicked off a whole firestorm in which Mon Power wanted to charge ratepayers $36 million to keep the plant idle while the company evaluated its options.

Fortunately, a third party purchased Pleasants. Unfortunately, Mon Power incurred hundreds of thousands of dollars in “authorized” costs during the process, which Mon Power customers will eventually be expected to pay.

Mon Power is also seeking a $207 million base rate increase (about $18 per month for residential customers). Mind you, the base rate is not the same as operating expenses. Operating expenses cover the costs of fuel to produce energy, moving energy, buying energy from other sources and environmental compliance. The base rate is comprised of personnel, taxes, debt, property (and depreciation) and other assets. And it’s the base rate that utilities get to make their profit from.

On top of that increase, there’s an expended net energy costs (ENEC) rate hike, to the tune of $167.5 million. That one would increase residential bills by $10.08 per month starting in March. Plus, there’s a 14-cent charge to all Mon Power customers for the solar beds Mon Power will be building.

If all three rate hikes are approved, Mon Power customers are looking at a nearly $30 jump on their bills.

Then there’s Hope Gas, which has asked for a $66.5 million rate increase as part of its Pipeline Replacement and Expansion Program (about $6.45 a month, which could be offset by the newly filed Purchased Gas Application). Though Hope hasn’t filed yet, we bet it will ask to recover the $37 million purchase price for People’s Gas.

Altogether, ratepayers are looking at nearly a $40 increase in their utility bills. That’s an extra $480 per year. And it’s ridiculous.

West Virginians are not made of money. We understand utilities are entitled, by law, to recuperate their costs and make some profit, but that profit cannot come at the expense of harming ratepayers. Not when temperature extremes mean greater reliance on AC in summer and heat in winter. Not when drastic rate increases may force people to choose between power and food or medicine or other essential bills.

The utility companies are asking for too much, too fast. The Public Service Commission must rein them in.

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New solar surcharge to raise Mon Power and Potomac Edison bills amid ratepayer advocate alarm over utilities' net metering plan

By: Mike Tony

FirstEnergy customers in West Virginia will see their bills increase to support company-generated solar energy.

They’ll also be compensated less than they should be for customer-generated solar energy if state regulators approve another FirstEnergy utility rate increase request, ratepayer advocates say.

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Regional Power Companies Propose To End Net Metering

By Briana Heaney

Currently solar customers can sell any excess solar energy they have back to the power companies for the same price that the company sells the energy. However, the power companies are proposing that they pay solar customers a lower “wholesale” price.

Mon Power and Potomac Edison filed a proposal with the Public Service Commission to change the cost of energy for solar panel owners, changing the net metering system as it is now. 

Currently solar customers can sell any excess solar energy they have back to the power companies for the same price that the company sells the energy. However, the power companies are proposing that they pay solar customers a lower “wholesale” price.

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Charleston Gazette-Mail: Mon Power, Potomac Edison ratepayers still on the hook for Pleasants Power Station costs

By: Mike Tony

Mon Power and Potomac Edison ratepayers aren’t off the hook even after the recent sale of the coal-fired Pleasants Power Station in Pleasants County to a different buyer.

The FirstEnergy-controlled utilities reported in a filing with the West Virginia Public Service Commission last week they plan to seek recovery of costs of roughly $350,000, plus additional costs not yet recorded, following their PSC-ordered consideration of buying the plant.

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