Columns

Florida Must Establish Free Market for Renewable Energy Production

Legislative session should have taught an important lesson
By: Mike Antheil | Posted: May 9, 2011 3:55 AM
Mike Antheil

Mike Antheil

With a white-knuckled grip, the old guard of energy producers, primarily the investor-owned utilities and the handful of companies that they do business with, are holding on to a business model that is outdated by its own fuel source and inching closer every day to resembling the bygone era of Ma Bell and regulated natural monopolies.

The investor-owned utilities are successfully convincing our Legislature that it is in the best interest of Floridians to apply the old, state-regulated business model to a new technology and a new way of creating electricity. In economic parlance, they are attempting to transition from a regulated, natural monopoly, where infrastructure and economies of scale give them the natural advantage, to a coercive monopoly, where their power is granted to them and protected by government intervention.

They know the clock is ticking, though, and they know that renewable energy technology is evolving so rapidly that policy and regulation will inevitably evolve right along with it. In this new era of energy production, you still won’t be able to build an oil refinery or a coal-fired plant on the roof of a Publix, but it is a perfect home for a 350KW solar array, like one currently under construction in Gainesville.

And it is in this modern era of production, as utility companies watch the price of grid parity (the price at which renewable energy becomes cheaper than current fuel sources) loom menacingly just a few short years down the road, that the regulated monopolies are pulling out all the stops to extend their monopoly all the way to the sun if we would let them.

As competition from the trucking industry broke the natural monopoly of railroads in the 1930s, so will renewable energy deliver a similar fate to investor-owned utility companies. When you throw politics and economic efficiency into the mix, making the transition away from the outdated model of energy production is no longer a question of if, but when.

Today, as we face the dual forces of the current economic climate and the political landscape that swept through the nation in the 2010 elections, Americans everywhere have embraced free-market forces and competition as a principle that cuts across all party and ideology lines. Competition, innovation and ingenuity have been the hallmarks of transition and growth for America through every economic adversity our country has ever seen.

So far, though, when applied to the production of energy in Florida, these principles lose ground quickly. And starting right now, it is time for the people of Florida to take back control of how they are buying electricity and who they are buying it from.

During the 2011 legislative session, small competitors were blocked from any legislation that would allow them to sell electricity to the grid under the paper-thin argument of a utility’s “obligation to serve,” basically saying that independent power producers couldn’t be relied upon to produce electricity and that they weren’t players in the overall scheme of energy production.

As an industry we may be encouraged by this claim as the last line of defense, because we need not look far to find clear and overwhelming evidence to the contrary. In New Jersey, for example, there are more than 8,900 solar systems producing more than 300MW of electricity and providing it to the grid and to others. In addition to implementing a targeted amount of renewable energy production, New Jersey has also embraced the key distinction that, although the utilities do in fact have an obligation to serve, the customers don’t have any such obligation to be served.

In a free and competitive market, individuals and businesses can choose who they buy clean, renewable energy from, and they can even choose to construct their own facilities and sell some or all of their power to a consumer. The shopping center in Gainesville could sell to its tenants, a farm in Bartow could sell to its rural neighbors, and a wind facility in Okeechobee could provide energy for themselves and the local community, all without the government stepping in, gumming things up and labeling them a regulated utility company.

What the renewable energy industry needs right now is for the government to just get out of the way and let the free market develop renewable energy in Florida.


Guest Column:  Mike Antheil is executive director of the Florida Alliance for Renewable Energy (FARE). He is also a consultant specializing in private and public commercial finance in the clean and renewable energy industries, and a managing partner at Green Asset Finance, LLC.

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Comments (11)

2:57PM MAY 10TH 2011
Mike

Clear, concise and compelling. Glad to be on your side. Looking forward to fighting the good fight in preparation for the 2012 session. As you said, it no longer is if, but when.

Don
Gary Simon
11:14AM MAY 10TH 2011
It is not just their existing monopoly, but their ill conceived argument, that if a hurricane came thru and blew out a private voltaic system ("PVS") at a home or small business, that the PVS would not, maybe could not, get up and running as fast as the public monopoly could. But with FEMA grants and probably other financing available in the event of a major storm, the PVS would be up and running soon. ALSO, decentralization of the producing electricity means that localized hurricane damage would not affect others nearby who are not similarly damaged, since there would be lots of systems around town to provide electricity. I remember waiting forever after Hurricanes Agnes & Wilma for infrastructure to get rebuilt all over town. Also it maybe at some time in the future if we develop decentralized systems, then we would not even need nuclear Turkey Point systems - a positive goal to seek for our children and grand children.
1:59PM MAY 10TH 2011
Gary,


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david r kelley
10:37AM MAY 10TH 2011
Well said Mike: Let us hope & pray that wisdom=justice and the will of working class Americans.
Along with financial support from a few compassionate Americans. Maybee we just might be able to win this battle against the powers that be,with all their money/power/control over our government= which maintains the status quo = meaning their money. Maybee / wisdom could overcome GREED
Harry Kegelmann
10:28AM MAY 10TH 2011
It should be obvious that the Republican Party fooled the public during last year's election by claiming that they want to create jobs. While there are already twice as many jobs in the solar industry in Germany than in the coal and nuclear industry combined, the Republicans want to make sure that nothing of that sort is happening in Florida. Even the Czech Republic, a former communist country with a population of just 10 million was able to install more solar panels in 2010 than the U.S. The Czechs understand free markets while the Republicans want to protect the energy monopolies and give the business to large out of state companies. If Florida Power & Light would have been allowed to build large solar farms and collect the cost of the systems from rate payers do you really believe that FP&L would have given those very same rate payers the energy generated from those solar farms for free? And where was the Tea Party when a monopoly tried to tax the consumers for the benefit of the monopoly?
Bruce French
10:25AM MAY 10TH 2011
My son and I are developing biomass electrical generators capable of producing 40 kw per unit. We know we can produce tons of electricity out of ordinary carbon based materials that are thrown out everyday such as biomass from landscaping and agriculture waste. This would reduce the strain on landfills, and create many many jobs in manufacturing, feedstock preparation, and construction of the units, all done in the USA. Keep the jobs here, keep the money here. I was in contact with my state senator and never got a response back during this last legislative session. None. This is unacceptable to shut out small business innovators. I don't want a hand out I just want an equal opportunity to get paid a fair amount for producing energy.
Jmsdean
10:20AM MAY 10TH 2011
For far to long the power utilities have had a monopoly on selling us, their power. We're forced to buy their power. And they're gauranteed a PROFIT!!!!!!!!!! If they make to much of a profit, they pay it back to the consumers. (Most of the time) I sure wish our company was garaunteed a profit.
One thing I would like to add to the article, is the importance of Demand Side Reduction used in congunction with renewable energy production. Along with renewable energy production, I feel that reducing demand on the load side of the utility meter is equally imoportant. If a utility power plant is 30% efficient and Solar PV is 30% efficient, Demand side power reduction is 100% efficient. The is great synergy between renewable energy production and Demand Side Reduction.
Scott
10:03AM MAY 10TH 2011
Thanks Mike as this is an excellent article and I hope it will wake people up. Natural monopolies serve a purpose to expand a technology to the masses but it is a proven fact that as technology advances the need for these business aberations disappear because free markets will advance services, features and expansion far more rapidly. Yes expansion, because more people will be driving electric cars, more kWh will be needed and we don't need to burn more fossil or nuclear fuel. As a Republican, I am at a loss as to why my fellow republicans in the House and Senate have forgoten their prime directive...more competition in the marketplace and less government.
5:14PM MAY 9TH 2011
An increasing number of jobs are being created using Renewable energy
and in particular wind farms; these have been predicted to stay in the United Kingdom too. The majority of these jobs offer competitive salary and benefits.
Joanne Cassidy
11:08AM MAY 9TH 2011
This writer has hit the nail on the head. Every Floridian should make their voices heard and tell their elected officials they didn't do what they were elected to do this session which was deregulate and create jobs - especially in the distributed generation renewable energy industry. They didn't even try very hard. From stacking the deck with less than expert energy and utilities committees, freshman chairs and taking every single cue from utility lobbyists, this legislature should be ashamed of their performance with regards to Florida's job and energy future!
LDouglas
7:10AM MAY 9TH 2011
I agree! Reducing our dependence on foreign countries and finite resources for our energy needs is only cake. At the same time if we're able, reducing our dependence on a corporation would provide the icing.

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