Archive for the ‘Massachusetts’ Category

The Next Massachusetts SREC Program

Posted August 14th, 2013 by SRECTrade.

On Monday, the Massachusetts Department of Energy Resources (DOER) held a Stakeholder Meeting to discuss the most recent updates to the RPS Solar Carve-Out II Proposed Design (SREC II). Our CEO, Brad Bowery, was in attendance. The specific details of the program can be found in the presentation posted on the DOER website. Here we’ll take a crack at understanding each of the design elements.

Declining ACP and Price Support Schedules
Like the original RPS Solar Carve-Out (SREC I), SREC II will have a declining ACP schedule that projects 10-years forward and sets an upper bound for the market. However, instead of a flat lower bound of a $285 Last-Chance Clearinghouse Auction price, SREC II will have a 10-year declining auction price schedule. The schedule initially drops from $285 to $271 in 2017 and continues down to $189 in 2024.

Auction and ACP Schedule

 

Analysis: The auction price is intended to provide price support for the market, but it also has the potential to lead to artificially inflated prices if the costs of installing solar drop dramatically over this period. In the last proposal, the DOER introduced a schedule for a declining SREC factor as a solution for addressing decreasing costs. This change reduces the complexity of the SREC factor (as we’ll see) while the decreasing upper and lower bounds of the market guides SREC prices downward over time, which is reasonable given that installation costs are expected to decrease over time.

Market Segments and SREC Factors
Unlike SREC I, SREC II will create 5 market segments that are treated differently in the market. Generally speaking, the segments are: 1) residential (<25kW, as well as parking canopies and emergency energy backup projects), 2) all commercial used on-site, 3) landfills/brownfields, 4) small-commercial off-site use (<500kW) and 5) large-commercial off-site use (>500kW). To qualify for on-site, 67% of the production must be used at the site. Each segment will have its production adjusted by a factor that ranges from competitively bid (segment #5) to 0.7 to 0.9 for the other segments. Once established, the SREC Factor remains fixed for the life of the project. So, for the residential segment, 90% of the generation counts towards SRECs. Any remainder is ineligible for RECs.

SREC Factors

Analysis: The idea here is that different segments of the market have different cost structures. This is similar to the underlying idea behind the concept of an SREC market. Since other renewables have different cost structures, it is unfair to force them to compete on the same playing field, so a solar-specific SREC market is created. In this case, the various segments of the solar industry also have different cost structures. Instead of creating separate markets for each segment, the SREC Factor is used to even the playing field. Considering the alternative of separate markets for each segment, this is the simplest way to address the underlying issue. This proposal includes a couple other changes. Most notably, the declining SREC Factor schedule was removed in favor of the aforementioned declining Auction price schedule to address declining costs. In addition, the remainder of generation that is factored out of SREC production no longer can be counted towards RECs. This was an onerous twist to the program that would have required participants to follow both the REC and SREC markets. To account for the potential loss of revenue, the DOER increased the SREC Factors across the board in this proposal.

SREC Factors and New Projects
With 3 months notice, the DOER can reduce the SREC factor for new projects only if the program is reaching its cap, or if substantial external forces are putting downward pressure on costs. Inversely, the DOER can also increase the SREC Factor immediately to respond to external forces that dramatically increase costs. One example is if the federal tax incentive were to go away.

Analysis: This tool allows the DOER to slow or speed up growth of supply in the market in response to external forces. It should serve to reduce volatility in boom and bust times. The key here is that under no circumstances can the DOER change the SREC Factor for an existing project. So each potential project affected will know of any changes before it is completed. That said, this does complicate things for larger projects that take more time to plan.

Managed Growth Segment
As mentioned above, the segment of the market above 500 kW where less than 67% of the production is used on-site will have their SREC factor competitively bid. For these projects, the DOER will host no fewer than 2 solicitations per year for a capacity amount determined by the DOER based on the existing supply in the market.

Analysis: Previously, the SREC market in Massachusetts was limited to 6 MW projects or less. With this rule in place, the DOER has shifted the focus away from size and towards whether or not the project is built to service it’s own on-site needs or if it is designed to sell power into the grid like any other electricity generator. This latter segment seems to be most likely to drive significant capacity growth, so this tool could be a very effective way to reduce volatility in the market, without throttling the majority of solar projects. It leaves room for these projects, while also forcing them into a competitive process in order to qualify for the program.

Forward Minting of SRECs for Residential
Residential solar projects will be allowed to create 10 years worth of SRECs at the onset of the project. The forward-minted production will be based on PV Watts estimates and the facility owner will be required to report production and fall within 80% of the estimate or face a penalty. The DOER may discount the number of SRECs that are forward-minted. Sellers will have 3-years to sell their forward-minted SRECs.

Analysis: This rule was put in place to promote more direct ownership at the residential level, which according to the DOER, has seen a drop off in penetration. If your system is estimated to produce 10 SRECs per year for 10 years, you can opt to receive them all in one batch of 100 SRECs (or less as determined by the DOER discount) to sell in the market in one of the next 3 years. This will greatly simplify the offering to residential customers for a few reasons. First, they won’t need to analyze the long-term prospects of the SREC market. At a minimum, a seller can estimate what the forward-minted SRECs can sell for in today’s market. Second, it effectively converts a long-term, uncertain cash payment into a rebate that will most-likely be paid back within 12-months. This should help considerably with cash-financing systems. The tricky part will be the impact that forward-minting has on the market. That said, if 100% of the cash-financed residential systems forward-mint and sell all their SRECs in year one, none of them will have SRECs to sell in any subsequent year. Given the small portion of the market that this applies to, it shouldn’t be a significant factor. In this simplified scenario, while the SREC capacity of other segments will grow cumulatively, the forward-minted potential of the residential sector will reset every year and will only grow based on the incremental growth of residential solar in any given year. When modeled out, it shouldn’t have as much of an impact as one might suspect on the surface.

Compliance Obligation Schedule
Based on DOER assumptions of installation weights, solar factors and forward-minting, the compliance obligations for 2014 and 2015 are proposed to be set in regulation at 129,338 SRECs in 2014 and 256,686 in 2015. Beyond that, similar to SREC I, a formula will be used to set the requirement by August 30 of the previous year.

Analysis: This is a positive development for projects currently planned that were unable to qualify for SREC I as it provides certainty that there will be a requirement for SREC II in 2014. The requirement allows for 143 MW to be added in 2014 and another 152 MW in 2015.

Summary
We were a bit concerned with the complexity of the last proposal, particularly around the introduction of forward-minting and SREC factors. It appears that the DOER is sticking with these concepts, but has made some changes that reduce complexity and move this proposal in a positive direction, without compromising the underlying benefits of the new design. While we will leave the specifics of appropriate values for ACPs, Auction prices, SREC factors, forward-minting discounts and compliance obligations to the solar finance experts, our comments will focus on the implementation and mechanics of the marketplace.

The biggest difference between SREC I and SREC II is that the newer program seeks to address the different cost structures of the various types of solar installations. To this effect, structurally, the most-recently proposed SREC factoring scheme accomplishes this in a relatively simple way considering the alternative of creating separate SREC markets for each segment. While the alternative would be the purest way to promote a fair, competitive market for each segment, the administratively set SREC factors allows the state to maintain one SREC market that caters to all segments. That is the beauty of this proposal. All the complexity occurs before the point at which SRECs are created. Once the SRECs are created, they will trade, unencumbered in an open market. Every participant will be able to point to the same set of market rules and the very same SREC prices. How they interpret those prices will vary based on the SREC factor of the project, but once a participant has his or her SRECs, the monetization of those SRECs will happen in a uniform, increasingly liquid market.

Now there are two caveats to that statement. First, re-minted auction SRECs from 2012 (and any other year moving forward) have a different set of attributes, that would result in buyers valuing them differently than normal SRECs. This could lead to a separate market for re-minted SRECs in 2013. Similarly, the forward-minted SRECs, could also carry a different set of attributes since they will be good for 3 years. This could lead to a 3rd market price for Massachusetts SRECs. In an ideal world, a MA 2012 SREC is a MA 2012 SREC is a MA 2012 SREC. There is one market, one price and one large pool of liquidity. When that isn’t the case, there will be one large pool of liquidity and two smaller pools of compromised liquidity. This is the only area of the current proposal where the complexity plays out AFTER the SRECs are created.

Next Steps
DOER is interested in receiving public comments on the final proposed design. Comments are due by August 26th and can be sent electronically to DOER.SREC@state.ma.us. In the Subject line, they ask that you put “Comments: SREC-II Final Proposed Design”

MA DOER Clarifies Purchasing Plan for Massachusetts 2012 SRECs

Posted August 6th, 2013 by SRECTrade.

Last Friday the Massachusetts Department of Energy Resources (DOER) announced that it would purchase any unsold SRECs deposited in the Solar Credit Clearinghouse Auction (SCCA) for $285 per SREC. Unlike the SCCA, this is a voluntary option. Depositors with SRECs in the SCCA will need to notify the DOER that they would like to take advantage of the offer by Wednesday, August 14th (an MA DOER set deadline). Any SRECs not purchased will be returned by the DOER to depositors’ accounts following the August 14 due date. Returned SRECs will be eligible to be transacted for 3 more years (2013, 2014, and 2015), but will not be eligible for any future Solar Credit Clearinghouse Auctions.

SRECTrade has made it easy for clients to sell their eligible SRECs to the DOER by including the DOER’s bid as a feature in their online account. SRECTrade clients with EasyREC accounts will need to log in to their accounts and indicate they would like to sell the applicable SRECs. All SRECs eligible for the DOER’s offer will sell for $285 per SREC, less SRECTrade’s EasyREC fees.

SRECTrade clients will have until Wednesday, August 14th at 9:00 am ET to log in to their SRECTrade account and opt to sell their eligible SRECs. Not all SRECTrade clients with facilities in Massachusetts are eligible for this transaction option. Only clients that had SRECs produced during 2012 and deposited in the SCCA are eligible.

SRECTrade account log in.

For additional information on the SCCA and the DOER’s bid for MA2012 SRECs please read our previous blog posts on the subject.

Massachusetts DOER Offers to Buy All Unsold 2012 SRECs after 3 SRECs sell in the Solar Credit Clearinghouse Auction

Posted August 2nd, 2013 by SRECTrade.

Participants in the Massachusetts  SREC market waited with bated breath today for the third and final round results of the first MA Solar Credit Clearinghouse Auction (SCCA). The SCCA is the hallmark price support mechanism of the Massachusetts SREC market. In over-supplied compliance years, the SCCA is meant to act as a potential last chance for excess SRECs to transact. For more information on the SCCA please see the official DOER page here and previous SRECTrade posts here.

Today, we learned that only 3 out of 38,866 available SRECs were sold. However, the DOER immediately sent an email following the news that they are offering to purchase all remaining 38,863 SRECs for a fixed price of $285 per SREC. The DOER explained its ability to purchase these SRECs on a compliance exemption it provided power suppliers on electricity load already under contract. The adjustment, implemented on June 7, 2013, revised the 2013 compliance requirement upward from 135,495 SRECs to 189,297. The DOER estimates that the incremental compliance obligation exempt from the 2013 adjustment to be approximately 40,000 SRECs.

Effectively the DOER increased the 2013 SREC requirement, but allowed power suppliers the equivalent of a 40,000 SREC exemption from the increase. This exemption is due to the fact that the compliance requirement increase was made retroactively after some power suppliers had already entered into 2013 electricity contracts. Instead of buying the 40,000 exempt SRECs in the open market, the DOER is purchasing SRECs available from the SCCA auction pool. From its email the DOER states that, “World Energy, on behalf of DOER, will directly contact early next week all depositors or their aggregators of this “after-auction” purchase option by DOER, and provide complete instructions on how to opt-in to this opportunity and execute the financial transaction.” Also of note, the DOER is using alternative compliance funds from previous years to cover the cost of purchasing these SRECs. The notice sent to stakeholders did state that that market should not expect the DOER to take this action in any future auction.

 

Round Two of the MA DOER Auction Does Not Clear

Posted July 31st, 2013 by SRECTrade.

The Massachusetts Department of Energy Resources (DOER) announced today, 7/31/2013, that Round Two of its Solar Credit Clearinghouse Auction (SCCA) did not clear. With Round Two not clearing, the compliance requirement for 2014 SRECs is automatically increased by 38,866 SRECs; the amount of SRECs originally deposited in the SCCA. This officially puts the 2014 Massachusetts compliance requirement at 464,520 SRECs. For more information on the SCCA please visit the official website and read our analysis here.

Rounds One and Two were designed to clear only if the bid volume is equal to or greater than the volume deposited into the auction account. Things get interesting with Round Three as the SCCA rules allow for partial fills (i.e. if buyer demand is less than the volume available for sale). Round Three will be held this Friday, 8/2/13. Stay tuned.

Massachusetts DOER Revises 2014 Compliance Numbers and Announces 2nd Round of SCCA

Posted July 27th, 2013 by SRECTrade.

Following Thursday’s MA DOER email announcing the preliminary 2014 compliance obligation, the DOER sent a follow up email yesterday, 7/26/13, that revised down the 2014 compliance requirement. Additionally, the email announced that the first round of the Solar Credit Clearinghouse Auction (SCCA) did not clear. The SCCA will now go to Round Two on Wednesday, July 31st. Any SRECs deposited in the SCCA are now eligible for three compliance years (2013, 2014 and 2015). The updated web page covering the new compliance obligation can be found here and the updated SCCA page here.

The 2014 minimum standard was revised down because of a calculation error

The DOER revised down the base line 2014 compliance obligation from 498,951 SRECs to 425,654 SRECs. The DOER attributed this downward revision of  73,297 (pre-SCCA results) to an error made in calculating the figures, “whereby the production from Generation Units operating in Q1 2013 was counted twice in DOER’s projection of SRECs that will be generated in 2013.” The revision sets the 2014 requirement to 425,654 SRECs, but if the SCCA reaches Round 3 then the 2014 compliance obligation will be increased to 464,520 SRECs.

The revision means less capacity is needed to meet the 2014 standard

With any compliance obligation announcement in Massachusetts we must adjust our calculations to account for a legal settlement between TransCanada and the DOER. Taking in to account the DOER’s revisions and the TransCanada reduction of 4,369 SRECs from the 2014 compliance obligation, the adjustments equate to 421,285 SRECs prior to any impact from the SCCA. We can convert the compliance obligation to calculate that an average of 363.2 MW or 396.7 MW operational all year long to to produce 421,285 SRECs or 460,151 SRECs depending on whether or not the SCCA reaches the third round. Note, these MW capacity figures only consider retiring 2014 vintage SRECs to meet the compliance obligation. It is possible older vintage SRECs can be used to meet the 2014 requirements, thus further reducing the capacity needed online throughout 2014.

We understand that 245.9 MW is operational (installed through July 25) and qualified for the current SREC program. Depending on whether or not the SCCA reaches the third round, a difference of 117.3 MW or 150.8 MW is needed to be added by the end of 2013 to issue the 2014 SREC requirement. Remember, this assumes the 2014 standard is only met with 2014 vintage SRECs and no additional capacity is added throughout 2014 (likely not the case given oversupply from prior periods and the possibility more MW capacity will be added before the end of 2013 or by June 2014; if eligible). Referencing the recent qualified and pending SQA lists, there are approximately 435 MW eligible but not yet operational. This means that (without taking in to consideration oversupply from previous periods) approximately 25-35% of the eligible, not operational capacity would need to be installed by 12/31/2013  to have enough solar capacity online by the beginning of 2014. See yesterday’s blog post to reference our analysis prior to the DOER’s revision.

The market did not expect round one of the DOER auction to clear

In order for the first round of the SCCA to have cleared today, all 38,866 SRECs needed to be transacted. Since the auction did not clear the SCCA moves to Round Two. The SRECs are now deposited back in to the SCCA with an extended useful life; 2 years increased to 3. Should a third round be needed then the 2014 compliance standard will increase by the number of SRECs originally entered in to the SCCA; 38,866 SRECs. At this point, the new 2014 SREC obligation will be increased to 460,151 net of all compliance exemptions.

Massachusetts Announces the 2014 Compliance Obligation and SREC II Program Meeting Date

Posted July 25th, 2013 by SRECTrade.

Less than 24 hours before the start of the DOER Solar Credit Clearinghouse Auction (SCCA), referenced here and officially here, the Massachusetts DOER announced the preliminary SREC compliance obligation for 2014. The DOER’s original email can be found here.

A quick look at the numbers

The official 2014 SREC requirement is 498,951 SRECs, however 4,369 SRECs are deducted from the overall requirement because of a settlement between TransCanada, a power supplier, and the DOER. This gives us a final number of 494,582 SRECs required. If the SCCA goes to the 3rd round, the 2014 compliance obligation will automatically increase by the volume deposited, 38,866 SRECs, resulting in a new 2014 net compliance obligation of 533,448 SRECs.

Approximately how much more solar is needed in 2014 

According to the DOER’s calculation worksheet, 245.9 MW of capacity is currently qualified (installed through July 25). In simple terms, the 2014 compliance requirement equates to an average of 426.4 MW or 459.9 MW operational all year long to mint the 494,582 or 533,448 MWh requirements (note the 2 scenarios depend on whether or not the the upcoming SCCC reaches the 3rd round). Also, its important to note that the MW equivalent figures only take into consideration SRECs issued during the 2014 compliance year. We already know there is excess supply from 2012, the volume banked and deposited into the SCCA, and oversupply from 2013 that will effectively reduce the capacity needed online throughout 2014 to meet the Solar RPS requirements.

The difference between the 245.9 MW qualified and the capacity needed under each 2014 scenario is a difference of 180.5 MW or 214.0 MW. Given the recent qualified and pending SQA lists, there are approximately 435 MW eligible but not yet operational. This means that approximately 40-50% of the eligible, not operational capacity would need to be installed by 12/31/2013 (without including oversupply from previous periods) to have enough solar capacity, by the beginning of the year, issue the 2014 MA SRECs required.

Timeline for large project installations

Projects that are greater than 100 kW in capacity and eligible for the current program must be operational by 12/31/13 or demonstrate that they have expended at least 50% of the project costs before the end of the year to receive an extension until the end of June 2014. Projects that can demonstrate substantial delays originating from the interconnecting utility can possibly receive longer extensions. This means that it will be at least until the end of the year, if not June 2014, before we understand the final shake out of installed capacity eligible under the current SREC program.

SREC II Program Meeting

The DOER will hold a stakeholder meeting to discuss the next SREC program on August 12th from 1 to 3 pm ET. The meeting will be held in the Gardner Auditorium of the Massachusetts State House in Boston. Further information on the SREC II program can be tracked here. The email announcing the meeting is linked here.

Borrego’s Dan Berwick Posts “Understanding Massachusetts’ SREC Auction Program”

Posted July 23rd, 2013 by SRECTrade.

Dan Berwick, Borrego Solar’s Vice President of Business Development,  recently posted the best article we’ve seen to date on the upcoming Massachusetts Solar Credit Clearinghouse Auction (SCCA). Dan Berwick’s article was originally posted on Greentechmedia.com and is re-posted here.

“This week, the Massachusetts Department of Energy Resources will run its first Solar Renewable Energy Credit (SREC) auction under the solar carve-out.

It might not clear, and everything will be okay.

The Solar Credit Clearinghouse Auction (SCCA) is happening for the first time this year because even though 2012 was the third year of the solar carve-out, it was the first year in which SREC supply exceeded SREC demand. Under-supply and high SREC prices in 2010 and 2011 attracted investment that tipped the 2012 SREC vintage into oversupply, and guaranteed oversupply in 2013 as well.

By rule, any 2012 SRECs not used for 2012 compliance will expire and lose all value unless they are deposited in the SCCA account in the month after compliance is closed, and before the auction is run. The 2012 minimum standard was 81,559 SRECs, and 119,247 SRECs were actually minted — 37,688 more than were needed. That’s close to the 38,866 SRECs that ended up in the SCCA account by the time it closed last month.

Next, the Department of Energy Resources (DOER) announces the minimum standard — that is, the demand level — for 2014.  It’s important to note that the DOER has no discretion over the 2014 minimum standard; it is calculated according to a formula set forth in the regulation, 225 CMR 14.00. The reason that the DOER has to wait until July 2013 to announce the 2014 minimum standard is that the formula for calculating it includes, as its final term, the number of 2012 SRECs deposited in the SCCA account.

Specifically, whatever the formula says 2014 demand would be, the actual 2014 minimum standard gets increased by 38,866. This is actually pretty intuitive, if you remember that every design element that makes this program unique among SREC programs is there to foster supply-demand balance. The SRECs deposited in the SCCA account represent over-supply — they are extra SRECs in need of a home.  By including the SCCA term in the formula for calculating new demand, the formula is simply saying, “Okay, there is an oversupply of 38,866 SRECs; if we want to get back to supply/demand balance, let’s increase demand by those 38,866 SRECs, and presto change-o, we’re back to balance.”

Now that the formula has sent an unambiguous signal to the market — “Hey, market: you’re gonna need these SRECs” — it’s time to run the auction.

The SCCA is in fact a nested series of three rounds of a fixed-price auction, that price being $300, or, from the seller’s perspective, $285, because there is a $15 administrative fee. In each round, if there are fewer bids than there are SRECs in the auction, the round is scrubbed and the process begins again. But by rule, the pot gets sweetened between each round. In the first round of the SCCA, the SRECs get two years of extended life — they can be used for compliance in 2013 or 2014. If buyers don’t like what they are seeing enough to pay $285 for every available SREC, then we try again with round two, but this time those same SRECs get another year of extended life; they can also be used in 2015.

If the second round doesn’t clear, the DOER plays hardball. The pot-sweetener before the third and final round of the SCCA is that the 2014 minimum standard gets increased a second time by the number of SRECs deposited in the SCCA account. So for 2014, that’s another increase of 38,866 SRECs to the 2014 minimum standard.

In our analysis, this, along with the 400 megawatt cap on supply, is the linchpin of the program’s design. Taken along with the various other program rules as defined in 225 CMR 14.00, the conclusion is robust and powerful: an uncleared 2012 auction inevitably leads to undersupply by 2015 at the latest. In other words, this occurs within the three-year extended life of an uncleared 2012 SCCA SREC.

Of course, that doesn’t guarantee a cleared auction, for a couple of reasons.

One, $300 is by many measures a pretty steep price to pay in the summer of 2013 for an SREC that could very well not find a willing buyer at a good price until the spring of 2016. Today’s market price for a 2012 SREC is just a bit above $200.

Two, it’s not obvious what a “good price” will be for that SREC. On the one hand, we have consistently observed in all SREC markets that the clearing price in an under-supplied market has been just a bit below the alternative compliance payment, which in this case would mean a price in the high $400s selling into an under-supplied 2015 SREC market. But on the other hand, the data set is not terribly large, and our shared history with SREC markets is not long, so it’s fair for investors to be cautious and conservative.

And three, this is a policy-created market, which means that it is exposed to political and regulatory risk, which is nobody’s favorite type of risk. Two to three years may be a long time to be exposed to it.

So this auction may well not clear.  And in fact, the third reason in the paragraph above is the reason we decided to write this note.

If the SCCA doesn’t clear, we may hear a number of calls for policy intervention, claiming that because the auction didn’t clear, the program is not working as it was designed to work. But that’s not accurate. In fact, the most innovative and effective element of the DOER’s brainchild is exactly its resilience in the wake of an uncleared auction. The program is designed to provide stability whether the SCCA clears or not.

We would not have seen the investment and building boom that we saw in 2012 if this weren’t the case. So far, the solar carve-out program has stimulated over half a billion dollars of new investment in the Commonwealth — an incredible success story for the Patrick administration and the Green Communities Act.

Does anyone think that investors injected half a billion dollars into our state’s economy with one hand while keeping their fingers crossed on the other that the SCCA would clear? Quite the contrary; I’m sure that no less than 90 percent of the time spent by credit committees evaluating these investments was dedicated to this simple question: “What happens if the auction doesn’t clear?” (By the way, if you have half a billion dollars and aren’t in the habit of asking that kind of question, I have a bridge I’d like to sell you.)

Now, that said, I would argue that there are two kinds of SREC sellers in Massachusetts. The first — the group that owns the vast majority of all MA SRECs — are investors like the ones I just described. Some are energy companies, some are purely financial investors, and others are independent local investors who saw a good opportunity to earn a return by putting their money into something positive. But as a group, these are sophisticated professionals who are totally capable of evaluating the opportunities and risks to a potential investment.

Massachusetts has both a right and an obligation with respect to these investors. The right is that the ratepayers and taxpayers of Massachusetts don’t have to bear the financial risk of this investment; if it turns out that investing in SREC-generating solar in MA in 2012 was a bad bet, a money-loser, that’s not their problem. Public officials tried to design the program so that it offered an attractive but not-too-attractive return, with minimal risk. If you then invested, Massachusetts hopes you will make a little money, not a lot of money. But whether you lose your shirt or do quite well, that’s the idea of a market-based incentive program.

The flip side of that is the obligation: in order to encourage a strong, low-risk, attractive investment climate in this kind of market-based program, policymakers have to refrain from changing the program rules unless it is so clearly necessary that all or almost all stakeholders agree. An un-cleared auction this summer would be a crossroads for the solar carve-out; good public policy in this case calls for forbearance. If those un-cleared SRECs end up back in investors’ hands — with a new lease on life — no doubt some will call for some policy intervention to prop up prices, and others will be content to bide their time in the expectation of a seller’s market within a few years. Either way, the rules are the rules.

But that’s just one group of SREC sellers. The problem with this argument is that group two is in a different situation altogether. Group two are homeowners. Though Borrego only works at the commercial and utility scale, I have some direct experience with group two because it includes some friends who, knowing I work in solar, have come to me for advice about going solar at the residential scale in Massachusetts. Actually, “advice” is the wrong word; “translation” is more accurate. These are savvy, sophisticated people, but it’s easy to see that group two is totally different from group one; they have no way to evaluate the future value of a Massachusetts SREC other than to listen to what other people tell them.

When the solar carve-out was being implemented in 2009 and 2010, many stakeholders took to referring to the SCCA as a “floor,” which understandably conjures a strong impression of something through which one cannot fall. To a first approximation, the SCCA was designed to clear, and I know that it is possible to pinpoint this or that statement from someone at the DOER or the Massachusetts CEC that could have been interpreted by a homeowner that they would always be able to sell their SRECs for $285, especially when relayed by a solar installer making a sale.

We may have a problem here. If the SCCA doesn’t clear, it may be a good idea to explore potential policy interventions that provide $285 per SREC, or something close to it, in relatively short order, to small system owners who hold the SREC position on their systems themselves.

Beyond that, though, let’s allow this well-designed program to run its course.

For the moment, though the market is tough, there is no macro-problem: SREC prices are low, solar is getting built, and business is good for local solar companies and national investors alike, which is a great recipe for job creation. If the auction doesn’t clear, we will likely see a quick drop in prices and fresh calls for a change in the regulation. But overreaction would be a mistake, especially given the trauma that the Massachusetts solar community just went through in June, with the quick filling of the 400 MW qualification queue.

The program design is sound and resilient, and in its present form will almost surely deliver 400 MW of solar more efficiently — for fewer subsidy dollars — than any of the other Northeast SREC markets.

A market-based incentive delivery mechanism is just that: a market. Like all markets, this one will go through good times and not-so-good times, and will achieve its objectives by leveraging the value of competitive pressure, which of course can be painful for market participants. But overall, if we take the long view and exercise restraint, this one is going to continue to work out well.

***

Dan Berwick is Borrego Solar’s Vice President of Business Development, based out of the New England regional headquarters. Dan’s primary focus is on shaping Borrego Solar’s unique business strategies and product offerings around the country, with a particular emphasis on the opportunities created by policy and regulation.”

 

MA DOER Updates – Eligible Projects Report

Posted July 12th, 2013 by SRECTrade.

The DOER sent out an email today, Friday, July 12, 2013 announcing two things: 1) the final version of the Pending SQAs list is available and 2) that the RPS Class I Emergency Regulation (225 CMR 14.00) will be posted  July 19, 2013 to the Massachusetts Register. A public hearing on the Emergency Regulation will be held on July 26th from 1 to 3 pm at Gardner Auditorium in Boston. The updated Pending SQA list can be found here and the DOER email can be found here.

Some numbers from the Pending SQA list

The Pending SQA list shows that 340.8 MW of capacity was disqualified for failing to show proof of a signed Interconnection Service Agreement (ISA) dated no later than 6/7/2013, but 277.2 MW remain eligible or eligible pending permission to operate (PTO) for the program. If we take into account the 401.9 MW listed as already qualified for the current SREC program, then we come to a rough total of 679 MW eligible or qualified for a program that was originally supposed to be limited to 400 MW! For more information on the 400 MW cap and the current status of the program read our previous posts on the subject.

Eligible or Eligible pending PTO means that a system has submitted paperwork for the current SREC program and is either <100 kW in capacity or is over 100 kW in capacity and submitted a signed ISA dated no later than 6/7/2013.

Qualified means that a project application was submitted before the 400 MW capacity cap was reached with all of the appropriate requirements in place. Of these qualified projects 221.6 MW are operational and 180.3 MW are not yet operational.

We expect some attrition may occur as projects that are not yet operational fail to meet the completion requirement by 12/31/2013 or fail to demonstrate 1) the project has expended 50% of its construction costs or 2) delays occurred as a result of the local interconnecting utility. All projects granted an extension must be constructed by 6/30/2014. This list gives market participants a first glimpse at understanding the upper limit of the capacity that could be allowed under the current program. The DOER will use these numbers to sort out the SREC compliance requirement for 2014, using a formula that takes into account the build rate to date.

Massachusetts Emergency Regulations Announced Today

Posted June 28th, 2013 by SRECTrade.

Today, the Department of Energy Resources (DOER) announced the Emergency Regulations for the Solar Carve-out program. Market contributors expected the program to reach its 400MW cap sometime in 2014, yet on May 29th the DOER announced the Massachusetts SREC program surpassed its 400MW cap. Today’s announcement outlines MA’s solar development rules under the existing program until the DOER finalizes the second SREC program.

These emergency regulations are consistent with the criteria outlined at the DOER’s June 7th meeting. A summary of these new regulations are provided below and more details can be found in the DOER’s letter to Solar Carve-out Stakeholders here.

Projects 100kW or less will be qualified under the current program as long as they have received Authorization to Interconnect by December 31st

  • If the second SREC program is not completed by December 31st these system can become registered anytime prior to the effective date of the new program

Projects over 100kW must have received a signed Interconnection Services Agreement (ISA) by June 7th and must have a Receipt of Interconnection by December 31st

  • Project ISA’s dated no later than 6/7/2013 must be submitted to the DOER by July 5th
  • Projects may be granted extensions until June 30, 2014 if they can demonstrate at least 50% of their construction costs are expended by December 31, 2013
  • Projects can also be granted an extension if they can demonstrate that the missing Authorization to Interconnect is due to a delay from the local distribution company

A current status on the existing Solar Carve-out Program as well as a list of projects that have received their Statement of Qualification under the existing program can be found here. If large projects are listed as pending on the DOER’s Qualified Projects List they have one week from today to make sure all the necessary documents are in order. The DOER will announce the final qualified projects list July 15th 2013.

These rules will take effect immediately, but are not yet permanent. The DOER has 90 days to ensure these regulations meet the administrative procedure law and will soon announce a plan for a public hearing and comment period as part of that procedure. The DOER will announce the new total MW program cap for the first SREC program in July 2014.

MA SREC Reminder: DOER Auction Deposit Deadline is June 15th

Posted June 14th, 2013 by SRECTrade.

The deadline to transfer MA SRECs to the DOER’s NEPOOL-GIS auction account is Saturday, June 15th. If not deposited by June 15, Massachusetts 2012 vintage SRECs will lose their compliance eligibility and cannot be purchased in the upcoming DOER Solar Credit Clearinghouse Auction. SRECTrade has transferred any unsold SRECs for clients that utilize its EasyREC asset management service. No action is required by SRECTrade’s EasyREC clients. NEPOOL-GIS account holders not utilizing SRECTrade’s EasyREC service may follow the SREC transfer instructions outlined here. SRECTrade anticipates that approximately 45,000 SRECs will be deposited in the DOER auction.

What this means for Massachusetts sellers

Massachusetts 2012 SREC transactions are effectively on hold until the start of the DOER Solar Credit Clearinghouse Auction at the end of July. The DOER auction could may include as many as three separate auction events. The results of the auction will likely be known by early August. All unsold SRECs placed in the DOER’s auction account will be offered for sale at a fixed price of $300/SREC. The DOER will administer a $15/SREC fee for managing the auction. Sellers will receive $285/SREC (less any SRECTrade fees, if applicable).

In the meantime, the first MA2013 SRECs from Q1 2013 production will be minted on July 15th, ahead of the DOER auction for MA2012 SRECs.

What is the DOER Solar Credit Clearinghouse Auction?

The DOER’s Solar Credit Clearinghouse Auction is a price support mechanism for the Massachusetts SREC market. The 2013 compliance goal is approximately 185,000 SRECs, but the market has already installed capacity eligible to produce more than this requirement. For an update on MA Solar capacity see this link. SRECs not purchased in this summer’s DOER auction will be placed back in sellers’ accounts and given an extended life of three years. These extended life SRECs will not eligible for future DOER auctions. Read here for more information from SRECTrade on the DOER auction and here for more information from the DOER’s website.

Why is the DOER auction for 2012 SRECs being held in July 2013?

Massachusetts SRECs are minted on a quarterly basis (4 times a year) with a 3.5 month delay. The last MA2012 SRECs were minted on April 15, 2013 and the first MA2013 SRECs will be minted on July 15, 2013. Compliance buyers (electricity suppliers) in the meantime must have purchased all of the 2012 SRECs they need before June 15, 2013 to meet their renewable energy requirements for the 2012 compliance year.

Why is the Massachusetts DOER auction only for MA2012 SRECs

The DOER auction is held to act as a price support mechanism in years where more SRECs are produced than compliance buyers need to purchase. For this reason the auction is held only after the Massachusetts electricity suppliers finalize their compliance filings and purchased all of the SRECs they need for the current compliance year. The excess, unsold, SRECs go in to the DOER auction and can be purchased to satisfy future compliance requirements. This is the first year the MA DOER Solar Credit Clearinghouse auction will be held. Previous compliance years were under-supplied, so no excess SRECs were available for the DOER auction.