Posted on 02/02/2006 1:48:15 PM PST by calcowgirl
California citizens will pay at least $3.2 billion over the next 11 years to finance a costly solar energy initiative rejected by the state's legislature in fall 2005 but implemented by the California Public Utilities Commission (CPUC) on December 13.
Observers quickly derided CPUC's decision, the California Solar Initiative, as demonstrating deliberate disregard for the state's democratic processes.
Initiative Mirrors Failed Bill
CPUC's California Solar Initiative is virtually identical to S.B. 1, the Million Solar Roofs proposal that was supported by Gov. Arnold Schwarzenegger (R) but died in the state assembly in September 2005.
S.B. 1 aimed to place solar power systems on the roofs of half of all new homes built in the state. In a bid to boost the appeal of solar power, the bill contained a patchwork of electricity price hikes, subsidies, and installation mandates designed to increase solar power, despite its prohibitive cost, to a 5 percent share of electric power generation in the state.
The program's costs sealed its doom in the California assembly. Each rooftop solar power system would have cost approximately $27,000 and would have provided only about half of a home's power needs.
Rebuffed by the state legislature, Schwarzenegger took the plan directly to CPUC, a regulatory body under the state's executive branch. CPUC adopted the Million Solar Roofs proposal virtually intact, leaving out minor portions of the bill that it did not have the power to implement.
Cost May Climb Further
Even the estimated $3.2 billion price tag for the California Solar Initiative may be overly optimistic. CPUC provided the estimate based in part on the assumption that the cost of solar equipment will decline significantly over the next decade. San Francisco voters were promised the same thing prior to a 2001 ballot initiative seeking $100 million to finance solar power equipment on city buildings. After voters approved the initiative, the price of solar equipment has not declined as promised. The city is stuck with a solar power proposal it cannot afford.
Economists are not expecting a solar power price turnaround. According to the September 20, 2005 Greenwire, solar industry officials expect prices to climb in the near future because of a shortage of silicon necessary for the systems.
Severin Borenstain, director of the University of California Energy Institute in Berkeley, told the Los Angeles Times for a December 14 story that solar power is "three or four times more expensive than [electricity] from gas-fired plants." He said,"The problem is solar panels are very sexy, and it's much easier to get people excited about them than energy efficiency or wind power."
"The [CPUC's] proposed Solar Initiative is striking in its ambitions," noted the December 14 Greenwire, "adding nearly $1 billion in utility ratepayer funding to what Schwarzenegger had envisioned for the cost of his legislation, S.B. 1. Critics had doubted that the governor's initially proposed 'Million Dollar Roofs' budget would be enough."
Markets Shun Solar
Admitting solar power is more costly than other forms of energy production, CPUC defended its Solar Initiative as the only way to force Californians to build and utilize solar power equipment. "We are convinced that a cost-effective and sustainable solar market is unlikely to develop without a commitment for market support," stated CPUC's interim order on the initiative.
"Many of the parties to this proceeding observe that solar technologies are not yet cost-effective," CPUC added. "We share this concern and adopt the CSI with the objective of supporting the development of an industry that can compete with more conventional technologies and that is robust without government subsidies. We have not addressed here a specific strategy to effect that objective but intend to pursue it in the near future."
"Solar power is substantially more expensive than other sources of power," said Tom Tanton, senior fellow at the Institute for Energy Research. "This is why solar power accounts for less than 1 percent of power generation in the U.S. If solar power made any economic sense, governments would not have to mandate or heavily subsidize its use.
"Renewable power mandates, including solar power mandates, are big winners for government bureaucrats' budgets, but big losers for consumers' wallets," Tanton said.
--- James M. Taylor (taylor@heartland.org) is managing editor of Environment & Climate News.
Ha!! I actually have traded that....and still own a slug of it.
apparently one plant in the Mojave produces 90% of the world's commercial energy.
Ok, so here is the moral dilemma. I live in Marin county. A solar system for my house would probably cost about $35-40K. It would never, ever pay for itself in reduced energy costs. But... if I get a huge tax break that cuts thousands off the real cost, and probably a significant property value increase well beyond the economic benefit (much like how liberals overprice hybrid cars) both because of the perceived eco-status and because Marin county liberals can't do math, do I go ahead and do it? I get back a small fraction of what I pay in state taxes, mostly at the expense of Marin liberals. I'm seriously wondering.
How much will your property tax increase...
"The rebate program is good if it is funded"
It already is funded by the rest of us ratepayers! Like they say on the KSFO morning show, WASS (we are so screwed).
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