The net metering scheme, which was set to expire in 2020,
has enabled so far the installation of a residential PV capacity of
approximately 1.5 GW.
The Netherlands reached over 2 GW of installed PV capacity
at the end of 2016, according to official statistics.
The Dutch Minister of Economic Affairs Henk Kamp has
announced that the net metering scheme for residential renewable energy power
generators will likely be extended to 2023.
In a letter sent to the local Parliament, the minister has
submitted a possible route towards stimulation of residential solar in the
Netherlands beyond 2020-2023, which is based on a study conducted by the Energy
research Centre of the Netherlands (ECN) on behalf of the Ministry of Economic
Affairs (Ministerie van Economische Zaken).
The study has provided five different scenarios for the
future of net metering, and is intended to showcase the effects these would
eventually have on tax income levels for the state budget, long-term
sustainability of a new scheme, and the relative impact on possible residential
market development in years to come.
One of the authors of the report, Marc Londo, who is
professor at the University of Utrecht, a senior consultant at ECN Policy
Studies and a substantive strategist at the NVDE (the Dutch Association for
Renewable Energy), told pv magazine that in all the scenarios
presented by the study, self-consumption will remain permitted, and that a new
cabinet, which is currently being formed following the elections that were held
in mid-March, will have to decide which option to choose among the five
alternatives proposed by the research institute.
Under a first scenario (A), which will maintain the current
situation and full net metering policy, electricity that is fed into the grid
and consumed at a latter stage has the same value, equal to the full consumer
price. This means that it does not matter whether electricity is self-consumed
directly or first fed into the grid: both have the same value. A second
scenario (A1) would allow the maintaining of net billing on the fiscal part of
the power price but would allow utilities to pay a price lower than the retail
price for electricity fed into the grid, with the the market authority allowing
this buy-back price to be 70% of the utility’s retail price.
Under a third scenario (B), the fiscal net metering would be
limited to a certain percentage of all electricity fed into the grid and
consumed in a later stage. Above this limitation, the value of the produced
electricity is only the buy-back price of the utility.
Under a fourth scenario (C), net metering would be fully
abolished, both in the utility’s price and in the fiscal part. Instead, the PV
owner gets a governmental buy-back subsidy on top of the utility’s buy-back
price. A final scenario (D) would envisage that net metering would also be
fully abolished, but that the PV owner would get an investment subsidy.
“Net metering will be maintained until 2023,” said Marc
Londo, “but thereafter scenarios C and D seem to be the most appropriate
instruments to provide a stable incentive for solar-PV in households, balancing
the various interests that are at stake.”
According to Peter Segaar, owner of solar website www.polderpv.nl and analyst of Dutch
solar market trends, the scheme, in its basic principles, would remain the same
as the original mechanism introduced in the new Electricity Law introduced in
July 2004. “It is important to keep in mind,” Segaar told pv magazine,
“that on average, taxation income by the Dutch State involves over 70% of the
variable kWh price in residential contracts (excluding the fixed grid costs for
customers with a small grid connection, and also the yearly, fixed energy tax
return provided by the Ministry of Finance). This is the main reason why, with
the strong residential market (already over 1 GW of capacity by the end of
2015, and this year approaching a level of 1.5 GW), net metering has become a
political issue in the public discussions.”
According to official statistics released by the Dutch Central
Bureau of Statistics (CBS), approximately 1,051 MW of the 1,515 MW of PV power
connected to the grid in the country at the end of 2015 consists of residential
PV capacity, 69% of total accumulated market volume. “The exact volume of
non-residential net-metering solar installations, however, remains unknown,”
explained Segaar.
Other provisional figures released by the CBS in May of this
year confirm that Netherlands solar market had its largest growth last year,
and that it
hit the 2 GW milestone at the end of December.
Newly installed PV capacity for 2016 was approximately 525
MW. This compares to 477 MW in 2015, 302 MW in 2014 and 377 MW in 2013.
Cumulative PV capacity installed at the end of December 2016 reached 2,040 MW.
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