Translator Disclaimers
For Immediate Release: Contact: Peter Peretzman
Date: 12/6/2019 609-984-9707

 

Trenton, N.J.—The New Jersey Board of Public Utilities (NJBPU) today approved a new solar incentive program to aid in the transition from the current Solar Renewable Energy Certificate (SREC) Program. The Transition Incentive will serve as a bridge between the legacy SREC program and a yet-to-be determined successor incentive program, and will consist of factorized, fixed-price, 15-year Transition Renewable Energy Certificates (TREC). TRECs will be available to projects that are in the SREC pipeline after October 29, 2018 but have not yet reached commercial operation at the time the Board determines the 5.1% milestone has been reached.

 

The Board also announced its intention to hold a cost-cap proceeding in early 2020 to determine the annual value of the TREC, specifically if there is sufficient headroom for a flat 15-year TREC price of $152, or if the Board will maintain a lower price of $65 for the first three years and $189 for the remaining 12 years. Over the course of 15 years, the total project incentive will be the same under both scenarios. The price of the TREC, multiplied by the project’s factor (defined below), will be the ultimate value of each TREC.

 

“Our mission is to achieve 100 percent clean energy by 2050, and we won’t get there without solar power, a critical industry for the state,” said NJBPU President Joseph L. Fiordaliso. “This transition program brings us another step closer to a more effective, efficient, and sustainable solar energy market for New Jersey that will help us attain our clean energy goals, continue an extremely successful solar program, and protect ratepayers from needlessly high costs. Ultimately, our aim is to balance ratepayer impacts with ensuring a thriving and stable solar industry.”

 

The Clean Energy Act, signed by Governor Phil Murphy in May 2018, required the Board to adopt regulations that close the SREC program to new applications when 5.1% of the electricity sold in New Jersey comes from solar or by June 2021, whichever comes first. At its December 18, 2018 Board meeting, the Board adopted a rule beginning the process of phasing out the current SREC program and developing a new cost-effective initiative that will build upon the success of the state’s current solar process.

 

The value of each TREC will also be dependent upon the factor assigned to each individual solar project. The Board set the value of each TREC in order to “right size” the incentive value needed for different types of projects in order to reduce costs to ratepayers. The different factorizations are as follows:

 

Project Type

Factor

Subsection (t): landfill, brownfield, areas of historic fill

1.0

Grid supply rooftop

1.0

Net metered non-residential rooftop and carport

1.0

Community solar

0.85

Grid supply ground mount

0.6

Net metered residential ground mount

0.6

Net metered residential rooftop and carport

0.6

Net metered non-residential ground mount

0.6

 

NJBPU Staff engaged with stakeholders at multiple points on this topic. On December 26, 2018, Staff issued a Straw Proposal that described a proposed process for the solar transition and seven “Transition Principles.” In response to stakeholder feedback on the December Straw Proposal and at stakeholder meetings conducted in January and February 2019, Staff proposed developing a separate Transition Incentive, which would serve as a bridge between the legacy SREC program and a to-be-determined successor program.

 

Regarding the Transition Incentive, NJBPU Staff held two stakeholder workshops in the spring and summer of 2019 and issued a Transition Incentive Staff Straw Proposal, with additional opportunities to comment. Two revised Straws were released in the fall, followed by one additional stakeholder meeting.

 

NJBPU Staff anticipates robust stakeholder engagement around the successor program.

 

The Board order is available here.

 

About the New Jersey Board of Public Utilities (NJBPU)
NJBPU is a state agency and regulatory authority mandated to ensure safe, adequate and proper utility services at reasonable rates for New Jersey customers. Critical services regulated by NJBPU include natural gas, electricity, water, wastewater, telecommunications and cable television. The Board has general oversight and responsibility for monitoring utility service, responding to consumer complaints, and investigating utility accidents.
To find out more about NJBPU, visit our web site at
www.nj.gov/bpu.

About New Jersey’s Clean Energy Program (NJCEP)
NJCEP, established on January 22, 2003, in accordance with the Electric Discount and Energy Competition Act (EDECA), provides financial and other incentives to the State's residential customers, businesses and schools that install high-efficiency or renewable energy technologies, thereby reducing energy usage, lowering customers' energy bills and reducing environmental impacts. The program is authorized and overseen by the New Jersey Board of Public Utilities (NJBPU), and its website is
www.NJCleanEnergy.com.

###