The California Senate on Wednesday passed a bill that would
create a 10-year rebate program for the state’s local energy storage market.
According to a bill analysis from the California
legislature, SB 700 directs the California Public Utilities Commission (CPUC),
by Dec. 1, 2018, to establish a program called the Energy Storage Initiative
(ESI) to provide rebates to customers of California’s investor-owned utilites
for the installation of customer-sited energy storage systems that are dispatch
capable to achieve market transformation.
“In California, we are pushing aggressive renewable energy
goals because we know that fighting climate change means taking action now,”
California Sen. Scott Wiener, author of the bill, said in a June 1 statement.
“This bill will push us down the path to 100 percent renewable energy. To meet
our goals, we need solar, storage, and other renewable energy resources in
every city and neighborhood in California, not just those that can afford it.
This bill will transform energy storage so that all can reap the benefits of
clean, renewable energy.”
The CPUC would be in charge of determining the annual amount
to be collected from ratepayers that is between $62.3 million and $141.1
million, and authorizes the CPUC, after two years of ESI program operation, to
limit eligibility by customer income. The bill also prohibits recovery of
ESI costs from customers participating in the state’s CARE program.
In addition, the bill reserves at least 30 percent of ESI
funds for energy storage systems in low-income residential housing and on
properties located in disadvantaged communities or low-income communities that
are owned by a small business, local or state government agency, education
institution, or nonprofit organization.
The bill was sent to the State Assembly on June 1.
“Thanks to the leadership of Sen. Scott Wiener, Californians
are one step closer to taking control of their clean energy future,” Laura
Gray, energy storage policy advisor with the California Solar Energy Industries
Association, said in a statement. “This bill would allow homes, businesses,
schools and public buildings to use solar and renewable energy at all hours of
the day and night. Using a combination of solar and storage, consumers will
make the sun shine at night.”
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