Solar customers in Nevada are taking legal action against NV Energy in response to controversial changes to the state’s net-metering program.
Plaintiffs John Bamforth and Stanley Schone filed a class action lawsuit on January 12 seeking recompense for being misled into purchasing solar systems “that do not provide the promised rebates, discounts and rates.”
The case stems from the Nevada Public Utility Commission’s recent decision to lower the net-metering credit for rooftop solar customers from the retail rate to the wholesale rate over the next four years. The decision also lowers solar customers’ monthly volumetric charge by about 1 cent over the same period, while increasing the monthly fixed charge for the bulk of Nevada customers from $12.75 to $38.51.
The changes came into effect on January 1 and apply to all future rooftop solar customers in Nevada, as well as the 17,000 existing solar customers in the state.
Last Wednesday, the PUC refused to implement a stay on the new regulation until the effects of the change could be fully evaluated. Many solar customers say the decision wipes out all of their savings from going solar, and could actually increase their monthly electricity bills.
Bamforth and Schone argue that the state and NV Energy misled solar customers by approving rebate programs to encourage the development of renewable energy, then “conspired to unlawfully reduce incentives” in order to reduce competition from solar companies.
The lawsuit accuses NV Energy of “anticompetitive actions, deceptive and unfair trade practices resulting in a restraint of trade, monopolization and maintenance of a monopoly over the electric utility in Nevada, price discrimination between different buyers, artificial price inflation, conspiracy to cause the aforementioned results through illegal means and negligence.”
Anne-Marie Cuneo, director of regulatory operations at the Nevada PUC, firmly denied the commission’s solar ruling was inappropriately influenced by NV Energy.
“That is an absolutely shameful accusation,” she said in an interview last week with the PBS local affiliate KNPB.
“The commission hears almost 500 cases a year, and if you look at their record, they clearly don’t favor NV Energy on many of the other cases,” she said. “To make a statement like that based on the outcome of a single data point is irresponsible.”
Solar installers argue the net-metering changes are not only unfair for existing customers, but also make it uneconomical for homeowners to go solar in the future — effectively killing Nevada’s solar market.
SolarCity, Sunrun and Vivint, three of the largest solar companies in the country, recently ceased operations in Nevada, resulting in at least 650 lost jobs. On Friday, the family-owned business Go Solar announced it has been forced to lay off 17 of its 50 employees.
Source: Greentech Media. Reproduced with permission.
ASX-listed battery materials hopeful Novonix says it has raised well in excess of the $5…
Allied Green Ammonia celebrate signing the “monumental deal” with Plug Power that will form the…
RACV says its newly launched virtual power plant is one of the first to compete…
Investigations are underway following a turbine blade break at a huge new wind farm, with…
Claims electric cooktops are vastly more expensive and more emissions intensive than cooking with gas…
New study finds modern solar shepherding businesses can pull incomes equivalent to doctors, senior engineers…