Senate, House panels approve ‘net metering’ bills

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A bill aimed at utility customers who install renewable power sources such as wind turbines is seriously flawed and would
hurt Indiana’s renewable energy movement, clean energy advocates told a state Senate committee Thursday.

The bill
would expand the number of customers who can send excess power from wind, solar and other renewable energy systems back into
the electric grid — an option currently limited to schools and homeowners.

But before the Senate Utilities
and Technology Committee approved the bill 8-3 and sent it to the full Senate, it endorsed changes that drew strong criticism
from supporters of efforts to expand Indiana’s "net metering" rules.

Current rules allow homeowners and
schools that generate up to 10 kilowatts per customer to get credit on future bills for excess power they produce. The amended
bill sponsored by Sen. James Merritt, R-Indianapolis, would bar customers who generate more than 10 kilowatts from carrying
over such credit on future bills.

"You will kill net metering if you do not allow customers to roll over credit,"
said Laura Arnold, president of Indiana Distributed Energy Advocates.

Arnold called the amended bill "seriously
flawed" and told the committee that customers’ ability to carry over energy credits makes renewable energy systems more
attractive by helping offset the cost of those systems.

The new provision would deal a big blow to fledgling efforts
to encourage the adoption of renewable power sources in Indiana, said Mike Mullett of the Sierra Club’s Indiana chapter.

Both the Senate bill and a separate bill that passed a House committee Thursday aim to increase the amount of power
that can be sent back into the grid and extend that option to businesses, industries and municipalities.

Before
Thursday’s meeting, Merritt’s bill would have boosted the net metering limit from 10 kilowatts to 100 kilowatts. But another
change removed the 100 kilowatt reference and specified that the Indiana Utility Regulatory Commission would be charged with
determining the power caps for various classes of customers.

Merritt, who chairs the Senate panel, said he was
surprised by the strong opposition to his amended bill. But he said his bill and the one that passed an Indiana House panel
are certain to undergo many changes in the coming weeks.

"They’re constantly under the microscope," he
said.

The bill approved by the House Commerce and Energy Committee is sponsored by state Rep. Ryan Dvorak, D-South
Bend.

Dvorak said he’s encouraged by what he sees as growing support, particularly among industries, for the Legislature
to pass an expansion of net metering. He noted that among the supporters that testified in favor of his bill Thursday were
representatives of Columbus-based engine maker Cummins Inc.

"Hopefully this year we’ve got a good push coming
from not only the renewable energy folks but the traditional industrial class in this state as well," he said.

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