The national market for shared renewable energy programs has grown significantly since the launch of IREC’s Model Rules for Shared Renewable Energy Programs in 2009 and the update of those rules in mid-2013. Today, there is increasing interest in shared renewables, along with many more mandatory statewide and voluntary utility programs. This week, the Interstate Renewable Energy Council (IREC) releases Five Guiding Principles for Shared Renewable Energy to provide a timely update to the guiding principles that appeared in IREC’s original model rules.
While many of the original principles remain, the modifications are intended to reflect evolutions in the market and inform program and policy design efforts. These guiding principles reflect the benefits of shared renewable energy programs to participants, the renewable energy industry, utilities and all energy consumers.
“IREC has been at the forefront of shared renewables issues since the concept was first on the drawing board,” says IREC regulatory director Sara Baldwin Auck. “As an active participant in the earliest states to create shared renewables programs, and many more since then, we have gained considerable insight about the value and purpose of these programs, as well as the challenges they face.”
The new Five Guiding Principles steer IREC’s approach with respect to shared renewable energy program development. They are also intended to broadly define what constitutes a shared renewable energy program. In line with IREC’s core mission to expand consumer access to clean energy, these Guiding Principles and all of IREC’s work in the shared renewable energy arena focus on the consumer experience.
The five principles in summary are:
- Shared renewable energy programs should expand renewable energy access to all energy consumers, including those who cannot install renewable energy on their own properties.
- Shared renewable energy programs should provide a fair value proposition to participants and tangible economic benefits on their utility bills.
- Shared renewable energy programs should be consumer-centric and accommodate diverse consumer preferences.
- Shared renewable energy programs should encourage fair market competition.
- Shared renewable energy programs should be additive to and supportive of existing renewable energy programs, and not undermine them.
Additional IREC resources regarding shared renewable energy programs include:
- IREC’s Model Rules for Shared Renewable Energy Programs – model program rules intended to assist stakeholders in developing shared renewables programs that expand renewable energy access to more consumers.
- Shared Renewable Energy for Low- to Moderate-Income Consumers: Policy Guidelines and Model Provisions-information and tools for shared renewables programs specifically designed to provide tangible benefits to low- and moderate-income (LMI) individuals and households.
- State Shared Renewable Energy Program Catalog-compilation of state shared renewables program rules and other details.
- Consumer Protection Trio-includes the Clean Energy Consumer Bill of Rights, Be Solar Smart Consumer Checklist, and Resources list, together spotlighting safeguards and pointers for buyers, government agencies, the industry, retailers and others.
News item from IREC