Archive for the ‘SREC Markets’ Category

SRECTrade Expands to Maryland

Posted June 18th, 2009 by SRECTrade.

SRECTrade is expanding into several other PJM Region states in July of 2009. As part of this expansion, we are utilizing this blog to help introduce our customers to the individual state SREC programs. Maryland’s Renewable Energy Portfolio Standard (RPS) requires electric service providers to provide 20 percent of their sales in the state from renewable energy sources by 2022. There is a specific carve-out for solar-generated electricity, currently at .01% for 2009 and set to reach 2% by 2022. Much like other states, electricity suppliers must make an alternative compliance payment (ACP) into the Maryland Strategic Energy Investment Fund should they not meet each yearly requirement.

Maryland is unique because the RPS mandates that electricity suppliers buying from individual solar owners must enter a 15-year contract for the sale of all the owner’s SRECs produced during that time. Due to uncertainty of the future, electricity suppliers have been disinclined to buy SRECs in this manner, and thus both sides have mutually used third parties (as allowed by law) as a means of transferring the credits between individuals and electricity suppliers. The SRECTrade auctions will serve as means to sell SRECs for sellers who are unable to lock into the 15-year contracts.

Meanwhile, Fred Ugast, an advocate for Maryland solar owners at U.S. Photovoltaics, has been working to secure 15-year contracts for their SRECs. He has familiarized us with the Maryland market and we are following his progress in this endeavor. According to Fred, there were 94 solar photovoltaic (PV) systems eligible to create SRECs in 2008, and 252 SRECs were created. This left estimated solar ACP payments at nearly one million dollars. The demand for SRECs in Maryland is approximately 5,000 in 2009, but supply is expected to increase at a faster rate over the next few years. SRECTrade hopes to be an integral part of matching that supply with demand in Maryland. Please check back as we learn more!

New State Auctions for SRECs

Posted June 18th, 2009 by SRECTrade.

SRECTrade Expands!
We are pleased to announced that SRECTrade will now be available for the rest of the PJM Regional Transmission Organization.  In addition to New Jersey, seven new markets have been added: DC, Delaware, Maryland, Pennsylvania, Ohio, Virginia and West Virginia.  Over the next few weeks, we will be putting up information on the SREC Programs in these states.

Cross-listing your SRECs
While not every state has an RPS with a solar carve-out, homeowners may find themselves eligible to generate and sell their SRECs in other states.  We’ll be working out the details of what is eligible and where.  However, as far as our auctions go, it will be pretty simple.  If you want us to sell your SRECs in any eligible state, simply check the Cross-List option.  We will then include it in every state auction in which it would be eligible and it will only sell in the auction with the highest price.  If you do not want to Cross-List your SRECs and prefer to sell them in your home state, just uncheck this option and we’ll only include your listing in your home state’s auction.

Next Auction
Our next auction closes on July 10th.  If you have SRECs in any of the states listed above, we invite you to join us as we embark on this journey across the PJM region!

SREC 2 Year Life Change

Posted June 5th, 2009 by SRECTrade.

According to the New Jersey Clean Energy Program, 2009 Energy Year SRECs (created from June 1, 2008 until May 31, 2009) will only count towards the 2009 Energy Year and can be sold through September, 2009.   We recommend selling all credits before the end of August, 2009.   Moving forward, 2010 Energy Year SRECs (created from June 1, 2009 through May 31, 2010) will comply with the new 2 year life rule and can count towards either the 2010 or 2011 Energy Year. So from now on, credits created can be sold in either the current year or the following year.

http://www.njcleanenergy.com/files/file/Renewable_Programs/SRECs/SREC%20Rule.pdf

What is the impact of this change?
In previous years when SRECs could only be sold in the year in which they were generated, sellers ran the risk of the market price dropping to zero if the utilities were able to meet the Renewable Portfolio Standard Solar Requirement before year end.  At that point, the SRECs would have no value to the buyers.  With this new rule in effect, if the Solar Requirement is fulfilled in a given year, the SRECs that are created for the remainder of that year can be counted towards the requirement for the following year.  Therefore, they will continue to be of value, however, it is still unclear as to how the market will react to such an event.

As the 2009 Energy Year comes to a close over the next few months, please keep in mind that the market will shift as the 2010 Energy Year auctions begin.  The SACP of $711 in 2009 will drop to $693 for 2010.  This should have a negative impact on the market prices for SRECs.  In 2009, the SACP jumped from $300 to $711.  It took the market several months to adjust to the new SACP.  Hopefully 2010 will be a much more stable year for SREC market prices.  At the very least, the 2010 Energy Year will begin with something that didn’t exist a year ago: A publicly listed, transparent, fair-market price for SRECs at www.srectrade.com.  We believe that nobody should be locked into a contract that gives up over 50% of the value of their SRECs.  Hopefully those days are behind us all!

Hello SREC traders!

Posted March 30th, 2009 by SRECTrade.

This is the first of what we hope will be many posts focused on the solar credit market.  SRECTrade has now been operating our online exchange in New Jersey for nine months.  Since then, we’ve seen the actual value received by solar owners for their credits rise considerably.  More importantly, the rest of the market seems to be catching up as the quotes our clients are hearing from brokers and aggregators are on the rise.  To the extent to which our public auctions have influenced this, we have succeeded in what we originally set out to accomplish.

Our approach has been met with a considerable amount of enthusiasm from solar owners in search of ways to get the best value for their SRECs. We’ve captured some of this feedback on our Testimonials page.  Small business owners and individual home owners who have made the choice to go solar have had little guidance about the SREC market.  Questions loomed about how it worked, where to sell these SRECs and how to value them.  With our SREC Program Information page, we set out to describe the SREC program in layman’s terms and give our clients a clear understanding of what influenced SREC pricing.  In addition to that, our auction clearing prices, as determined by supply and demand, have brought a visibility to the market that had not existed before.  The benefits to our clients are clear, but we are also finding that our public pricing model is generating much interest from other traders, investors, universities and even neighboring state governments.

We launched this venture because we believed there was a missing link in the SREC model and our goal remains the same: bring efficiency to an inefficient market, creating and delivering value to the solar generators.  Recently, we came across a blog post by Dave Conifer who was installing a solar system for the first time and writing about it at http://solarpowr.blogspot.com/.  His story really narrowed in on the exact issue that we are trying to address.  While we were encouraged to know that we turned out to be exactly what Dave was looking for, it was a telling reminder that we still have a long way to go in getting the attention of installation companies as an alternative to the brokers they have been recommending.