Yahoo – AFP,
Kerry Sheridan, 11 March 2015
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Workers
install solar panels on a rooftop on February 20, 2015 at a
home in Palmetto
Bay, Florida (AFP Photo/Kerry Sheridan)
|
Miami (AFP)
- Florida is widely known as the Sunshine State but when it comes to harnessing
solar power, lots of customers find it just doesn't pay because electricity is
already cheap and there is little incentive to make the change from fossil
fuels.
Anger over
the situation has whipped up an unusual coalition of hardline conservatives,
evangelical Christians and liberal environmentalists who want to break down
what they describe as a "monopoly" held by big power companies.
Those
involved include the Sierra Club, the Christian Coalition, the Libertarian
Party, the Evangelical Environment Network, Greenpeace USA and Physicians for
Social Responsibility.
The
problem, they say, is that Florida is one of only five states that explicitly
prohibits anyone other than the big utilities from selling power. Individuals
with solar panels can't sell the extra power they produce and solar companies
are barred from selling any power that they generate -- unless they sell it
back to the utility company.
"We
are basically outlawing commerce when it involves solar," said Tory
Perfetti, chairman of Floridians for Solar Choice and Florida director of
Conservatives for Energy Freedom.
"That's
what this is ballot initiative is for," he said during a recent drive to
collect petition signatures in St. Petersburg.
"It is
to open up Florida's energy market, to give people a choice."
The
movement needs 700,000 signatures, and organizers say they gathered more than
100,000 in the first month of their drive to allow voters to decide in 2016
whether or not to allow solar providers to sell power directly to consumers.
For
environmentalists like David Cullen of the Sierra Club Florida, global warming
is the key reason to move away from fossil fuels, which spew greenhouse gases
into the atmosphere.
"Some
may think this is an unusual group of people to be working together, but what
we share is common sense," Cullen said.
Few
incentives
California
leads the way in solar in the United States, while Florida lags behind at 13th
nationwide for installed solar capacity, even trailing small northern states
like New Jersey and Massachusetts, according to the Solar Energy Industries
Association.
Most of
Florida's electricity is generated from natural gas (62 percent) and coal (21
percent), according to the US Energy Information Administration.
Another 12
percent comes from nuclear, 2.2 percent comes from solar, and the rest is from
other renewables.
"There
is a reason why here in Florida solar is not that popular," said Joe
Spector, vice president of operations at Ygrene, a company that helps finance
solar panels by arranging for homeowners to pay higher property tax for 10 or
20 years instead of paying up front.
"Because
our energy costs are actually very low, comparatively speaking."
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Raul
Vergara, president of Cutler Bay Solar Solutions, stands near his latest
solar
installation on February 20, 2015 at a mansion in Palmetto Bay, Florida
(AFP
Photo/Kerry Sheridan)
|
Ygrene is
available to homeowners in 17 cities in Florida -- a tiny portion of the
state's 20 million population.
For most
people in Florida, solar panels require tens of thousands of dollars in cash.
Then, they can see their meter move backward when the sun is shining, and move
forward at night when they use electricity from the grid.
If a solar
user in the Miami area produces more energy than he or she uses, Florida Power
and Light (FPL), will send a reimbursement check at the end of the year.
But FPL
only pays for any extra solar produced at a rate of three to five cents per
kilowatt, while it sells customers electricity at 10 cents per kilowatt.
"FPL
is dictating the rates," said Raul Vergara, president of Cutler Bay Solar
Solutions.
"In
the states where the legislation has changed, the average rate is 11 and 12
cents a kilowatt."
Mark Heise,
a lawyer who recently installed solar panels on his house in a southern suburb
of Miami, paid $40,000, or $28,000 after getting a 30 percent federal tax
break. The panels have lowered his bill, but not eliminated it.
"It
was definitely still worth it," he said.
"I am
realizing the financial advantages each month and my kids see it is important
to take care of the environment."
![]() |
Mark Heise,
a lawyer who recently installed solar panels on his house in a
southern suburb
of Miami, paid $40,000, or $28,000 after getting a 30 percent
federal tax break
(AFP Photo/Kerry Sheridan)
|
'Gangbusters'
The new
political movement hopes to make power-purchasing agreements (PPAs) legal in
Florida, whereby a solar company can install panels on a person's roof for no
upfront cash and then sell the energy to the customer. Any extra solar power
could be sold to neighbors, tenants, or private companies.
"In
other states where this type of arrangement is allowed, solar development has
gone wild. It has gone gangbusters," said George Cavros of the Southern
Alliance for Clean Energy.
FPL, the
biggest utility in Florida, declined an AFP request for comment.
Duke
Energy, the second largest utility in the state, said solar "will be an
important part of Florida's energy future," but pointed out that obstacles
remain. Unlike natural gas which can provide power 24 hours a day, solar
doesn't work at night. It cannot be stored cost-effectively, and creates power
swings on the grid, a spokesman told AFP.
"Even
though solar costs have decreased significantly in recent years, right now,
solar still costs more than traditional electricity resources," he said.
The
conservative group Americans for Prosperity, funded by the billionaire Koch
brothers, has begun to push back against the drive for solar choice. The group
sent a letter to supporters warning of higher electricity costs if the ballot
measure is passed.
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David Koch,
chairman of the Americans for Prosperity Foundation, funds some
of the
largest dark money networks. (AP Photo/Phelan M. Ebenhack, File) | AP
|
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