| Selling electricity back to state: Utilities, 
    S.C. officials to debate giving consumers energy credits   Feb 14 - McClatchy-Tribune Regional News - Noelle Phillips The State, 
    Columbia, S.C.
 If you're laying solar panels on your roof or building a windmill in the 
    backyard, soon you will know how much utility companies will pay for the 
    electricity you generate.
 
 You might, however, need a Ph.D in mathematics to figure out the financial 
    benefits.
 
 The S.C. Public Service Commission will hold a hearing today where the 
    state's three power companies will explain how much they plan to pay 
    customers who produce electricity and then sell it back to the grid.
 
 The process for selling energy back to the grid was established by the 
    federal Energy Policy Act of 2005, the same bill that gave tax credits to 
    homeowners and businesses who buy energy-efficient vehicles and appliances.
 
 Under the government program, a homeowner can install a solar energy system, 
    for instance, use electricity to run things in the home and then sell the 
    leftover energy back to utility companies.
 
 Thus far, no one in South Carolina is participating, said Dukes Scott, 
    executive director the S.C. Office of Regulatory Staff. However, "just 
    because no one is using it now, it's not a reason to not have the program in 
    place."
 
 Utility regulators hope people will participate once rates are set and 
    consumers know the economic advantages.
 
 Plus, technology for solar energy production is rapidly changing, which 
    makes it more affordable and more productive in places like South Carolina.
 
 "Right now, the costs of the technology are fairly high," said Randy Watts, 
    electric regulatory manager at the Office of Regulatory Staff.
 
 Even if the financial benefits are small, some might participate for 
    environmental reasons.
 
 Today, the three energy companies operating in South Carolina will explain 
    how much they will pay homeowners and businesses for the extra electricity.
 
 The calculations are not simple. The written proposals from SCANA, Progress 
    Energy Carolinas and Duke Energy Corp. are lengthy. None are the same.
 
 Each company will set rates based on whether the electricity was produced 
    during peak or off-peak hours, and those times vary by company. Also, rules 
    will dictate when homeowners can receive checks from the utilities or when 
    they get credit for the energy their systems produced, Watts said.
 
 Watts and other utility regulators admit the formulas are complicated.
 
 "They're going to have to study and see if they want to put in a system at 
    their residence or business," he said.
 
 One solar advocate in the state said the financial benefits for consumers 
    will be minimal under the companies' proposals.
 
 David Odell, president of Sun Store Solar in the Upstate, said customers 
    would receive about 2 cents of financial credit for generating electricity 
    and then pay 8 cents for what they buy from the utility companies.
 
 While South Carolina debates these rates, other states are gaining ground by 
    putting together sensible plans, Odell said. Eventually, solar energy will 
    help relieve the U.S. dependence on fossil fuels and carbon emissions, he 
    said.
 
 "It's not a part of the solution today. But it will be part of the solution 
    so let's start knocking down these roadblocks."
 
 Reach Phillips at (803) 771-8307.
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