Ever wonder why solar power is not economically viable in Florida, the Sunshine State? Citizen Larry Nelson embarked on a quest to determine the answer through the process available to citizens through the Florida Public Service Commission that "regulates" utilities in Florida. It is a long letter but well worth the read:
366.01 - The regulation of public utilities as defined herein is declared to be in the public interest and this chapter shall be deemed to be an exercise of the police power of the state for the protection of the public welfare and all the provisions hereof shall be liberally construed for the accomplishment of that purpose.
366.041 - In fixing the just, reasonable, and compensatory rates, charges, fares, tolls, or rentals to be observed and charged for service within the state by any and all public utilities under its jurisdiction, the commission is authorized to give consideration, among other things, to the efficiency, sufficiency, and adequacy of the facilities provided and the services rendered; the cost of providing such service and the value of such service to the public; the ability of the utility to improve such service and facilities; and energy conservation and the efficient use of alternative energy resources;
366.05 - In the exercise of such jurisdiction, the commission shall have power to prescribe fair and reasonable rates and charges . . .
366.06 - . . . the commission shall have the authority to determine and fix fair, just, and reasonable rates that may be requested, demanded, charged, or collected by any public utility for its service. The commission shall investigate and determine the actual legitimate costs of the property of each utility company, actually used and useful in the public service . . . In fixing fair, just, and reasonable rates for each customer class, the commission shall, to the extent practicable, consider the cost of providing service to the class, as well as the rate history, value of service, and experience of the public utility; the consumption and load characteristics of the various classes of customers; and public acceptance of rate structures.
December
13, 2012
Honorable
Representative Michelle Rehwinkel Vasilinda
1001
The Capitol
402
South Monroe Street
Tallahassee,
FL 32399-1300
Honorable
Representative Mike Fasano
412
House Office Building
402
South Monroe Street
Tallahassee,
FL 32399-1300
Honorable
Representative Dwight Dudley
1401
The Capitol
402
South Monroe Street
Tallahassee,
FL 32399-1300
Honorable
Representative Daphne Campbell
1101
The Capitol
402
South Monroe Street
Tallahassee,
FL 32399-1300
Re:
Florida Public Service Commission
Dear Honorable Representatives:
My name is Larry Nelson and I am one of the private citizens
who intervened in the current FPL rate case, Florida Public Service Commission ("FPSC")
docket #120015. My intervention was
granted by order of the FPSC on July 12, 2012 and I subsequently spoke as a
party at four of the ten public service hearings, specifically those held in Miami,
Miami Gardens, Plantation and Pembroke Pines on August 7 & 8, 2012. I drove
from Sarasota to the FPSC in Tallahassee twice, and I participated in the Pre-Hearing
Conference on August 14, 2012. I
withdrew from the case on August 20, 2012, after it became clear to me that the
FPSC system was hopelessly biased in favor of FPL. In all, I spent about $1300,
mostly for travel expenses to the public service hearings and to Tallahassee,
and I have no direct or indirect economic or other interest of any kind related
to this matter except that I am an FPL customer who has rooftop photovoltaic solar
panels.
The reason for my intervention was my interest in clean
renewable energy, specifically the treatment of electricity generated from rooftop
photovoltaic solar panels, and more generally with the Florida legislative
mandate in the Florida
Energy Efficiency and Conservation Act to encourage clean renewable
energy.
With the renewed consideration of climate change in the wake
of Superstorm Sandy, I am writing to you to request your consideration of those
aspects of the existing FPSC system which serve to discourage energy production
from rooftop photovoltaic solar panels.
I would also like to bring to your attention some of the
absolutely shocking ways I witnessed in which the FPSC system operates to the
advantage of FPL and to the disadvantage of citizens of the State of Florida.
I have two 10kw rooftop solar photovoltaic systems, one on
my residence and a second on a duplex I rent as a vacation rental property. I
bought these in 2011 and subsequently discovered that the excess electricity
that may be generated above our own use would receive seemingly illogical and
unfair treatment. This would seem to be contrary to the legislative mandate to encourage
this type of energy. Since the FPSC is mandated by Florida Statutes 366.82(10) to
consider utility company treatment of alternative energy in rate cases, I
intervened in the FPL rate case to attempt to address the unfair and
suppressive treatment of clean rooftop photovoltaic solar energy.
There are three ways that solar power produced by rooftop photovoltaic
panels are treated unfairly in my opinion:
1) The amount that a utility pays for excess electricity
from rooftop panels is too low. FPL charges a residential customer around 11
cents per kilowatt hour ("kwh") for power but pays around 3 cents or
less per kilowatt hour for power generated from rooftop photovoltaic solar
panels. The amount paid for the power is actually less than the "pass
through fuel charge" which is supposed to be the actual cost of the fuel
per kilowatt hour passed through without profit. Yet FPL pays less than that
for the renewable energy it receives. FPL accomplishes this in two ways. The
first is that the computation of the "fuel pass through" is different
than the computation of the "avoided cost" which is how the amount
paid for the solar power is computed. The "avoided cost" is computed
from a specific designated generation facility and is the cost of the fuel not
burned to not generate the last bit of electricity divided by the electricity
not produced. The "fuel pass through" cost is computed differently.
The second way FPL pays too little for electricity from rooftop photovoltaic solar
panels is the fiction that solar rooftop power creates no "capacity".
It is said to replace or add nothing to infrastructure. The value of the solar
power replacing power plants, transmission lines, operations, maintenance,
repair, etc. is said to be zero. This fiction is based on the idea that a cloud
might come over the sun. Therefore the solar power might or might not be there
and is as random as if you turn off a generator for six months. The power is
considered "as available" - if it is there they pay for it, if not,
not. You can't count on it so it replaces no "capacity". Except this
is not true. The solar power is exactly as reliable as the sun. The solar power
is no more unreliable than the chance that the sun won't rise tomorrow and
might not rise for the next month. In the aggregate, all of the rooftop solar
systems put out an amount of "capacity" that is exactly known. A
certain part of the state may have a certain amount of cloud cover on certain
days, but overall, the amount of solar power generated per day or per year at
any location is a statistical certainly and known. So no matter how much
rooftop solar power is produced by however many solar arrays, FPL excludes any
value for transmission lines not built, power plants not built, repairs and
maintenance, etc.
2) FPL does not allow excess power generated in the fall to
offset usage the following summer. In theory the system in place in Florida for
residential rooftop solar panels is "Net Metering". Net metering
would mean, and the clear initial intent of the Florida legislature was for it
to mean, that if you generate 12,000 kwh per year and you use 12,000 kwh per
year, that you can offset the two and pay only the charges for being a customer.
But it doesn't quite work like that. The way it works is that the air
conditioning part of your bill is less in October, November and December so you
may have extra electricity generated. FPL then cashes you out at the 3 cents
per kwh at the end of the calendar year and you end up buying that electricity
back the following summer at 11 cents per kwh during peak air conditioning
season.
3) A building with multiple meters (and the law specifies
that new buildings like duplexes must have multiple meters) cannot apply the
power from a rooftop solar array to more than one meter. In jurisdictions where
this is done, it is called meter aggregation. FPL opposes meter aggregation.
Without meter aggregation either the building meters must be rewired into fewer
meters, which costs thousands of dollars, or multiple solar systems must be
installed which also increases costs by thousands of dollars.
All of this means that the incentive to put solar arrays on
rooftops in Florida that would replace additional power plants and additional
transmission lines and additional greenhouse gases is seriously suppressed.
So anyway, off I went, to the FPSC rate case process to see
what the heck is the problem, and what could be done about it.
My first stop on my adventure was the public service hearing
held in Sarasota on May 31, 2012. Here I
first saw the most shocking thing about the public hearing process. In the lobby
of the hearing site (Sarasota City Hall) were numerous FPL customer service
representatives wearing FPL shirts who are greeting members of the public
arriving to speak to the rate increase proposal. And FPL seems to have their
own dedicated room. Which made no sense at all. It's like a court hearing but
one of the parties to the case gets to have their own room in the courthouse
and a staff to lobby everyone, judges, jurors and the public as they walk by as
to why their side is right. FPL also
gets to have a table handing out literature. Nobody else gets to have a room or
a table or representatives right outside the hearing room. There is no Audubon
Society, no Environmental Defense Fund, no Florida Public Interest Research
Group in the lobby lobbying (I guess that is where the term comes from!)
against the rate increase or against the proposals or actions of FPL.
The importance of this
cannot be overstated. I had not yet intervened in the case but when I did
subsequently intervene and speak from the stage as a party at the four Miami
area public service hearings, I found that FPL gets a special room at every
public hearing. They get to intercept members of the public who come to the
hearings with complaints, before those members of the public enter the hearing
room, and redirect them to the special
FPL room and give them whatever it takes to "resolve their
complaint". The evidence indicates they are much more generous in
achieving customer satisfaction in the special FPL rooms at the public hearings
than they are in the normal course of their business. Essentially they run
bribery rooms at every public hearing site with FPSC blessing. One customer's
account of this was given at the public service hearing in Pembroke Pines and I
quote that account in full here (the tone of the person in the video leaves no
doubt as to what exactly is being said):
GINGER
JEANETTE MAHADEO
was called as a witness on behalf of the Citizens of the State of
Florida and, having been duly sworn, testified as follows:
DIRECT STATEMENT
MS. MAHADEO: Well, how is
everyone doing? My name is already with my address over there, so I live at 24
Pines Place across the hall -- it's across the street over there.
I don't want to
feel like the bad guy, but I may, because I had a big problem with FPL for over
three years, and I could not get it resolved. I called even yesterday, and the
people that I spoke to on the phone was giving me this long drawn out story
about why they could not help me. I said, listen, this is the problem. Y'all
sent someone over to my home to do a home survey, but whenever you got here you
said you only did it in the residential areas with people that have homes. Well,
I live in an apartment, so she did the survey. So I told her I didn't have a
lot of hot water and my bill was really hi.
So she got on the floor and she made
some adjustment, and, Lord have mercy, the next month my bill was sky high.
Where am I going to get the money to pay this bill? I called and I got an
extension the first time. The next time (knocking on podium) somebody knocking
at my door. I am on a fixed income. When I was working it was different. Now
the reality of it is whenever you get Social Security, that's another problem,
but you have to live with whatever you get. So I said to him can I pay part of
the bill? Ma'am, you have to pay all the bill. If you don't we are going to
disconnect your lights. And I said, well, hold on a second. Just give me a
moment here.
Listen, all of this
good stuff about FPL sounds fantastic until you have to live the dream. It is
not all it is cut out to be, because I had to go through it. When I came
through that door today and I told these people that I had a problem, the next
thing I know everybody was loving me and took me upstairs. It took me 15
minutes to get everything resolved. And I just called yesterday, so you do the
math.
(Audience laughter.)
CHAIRMAN BRISÉ: Thank you
very much for your testimony.
Moreover, at the very beginning of every public hearing, FPL
is allowed to make an official announcement that FPL is there with a special
room full of FPL computers to resolve any customer complaints thereby giving
the people in the hearing room one last chance to get up and go to the FPL
bribery room before the substance of the hearing begins. The statement made at
the Miami service hearing by FPL attorney Bryan was as follows:
In
a moment you will hear from FPL's president, Eric Silagy. He will explain to you what we're asking for
in this rate request and why we're asking for it.
But
before he speaks, I wanted to inform you that we've also brought several
Customer Service Representatives along with us today. If you have a question or a problem with your
electric bill or your service, please feel free to talk to them. They're set up in a room that's just out
these chambers to the left. They have computers and can access your account information.
And if it's possible for them to resolve your question or problem today, they
will do so.
We
have a couple of FPL representatives in the room, if you'd raise your hands,
who would be happy to assist you in locating the customer service room.
Furthermore, it appeared that FPL had lots of supporters in
the audience. People who almost all said the same thing. They said that they
didn't have any position on whether the rate increase should be granted, but
that FPL was generally wonderful. I subsequently found out that FPL recruits
customers to speak for them. Now maybe that is, on its face, not such a bad thing, but like sausage making,
the details are not pretty. I was also told that in past rate cases FPL would
sign up all its recruits first, leaving members of the public no time to speak.
This is not surprising given the "joint venture" atmosphere between
FPL and PSC staff in the lobby of the hearing venues where the signup sheets
for members of the public are located.
Anyway, it didn't take too long during my participation in
the four public hearings before I decided to start asking the pro-FPL witnesses
at the public hearing if they had been asked to come there by FPL (as an
intervenor, I could do this) . Virtually every one said yes. As the four
hearings went on I would ask more questions and more details would come out. Eventually
the extent of the FPL recruitment began to be clear. FPL managers would recruit mostly business
customers, sometimes with promises, sometimes with threats, but mostly on the
strength of customer relationships. FPL also held briefings where business customers
were given the case for an FPL rate increase and recruited to come to the
public service hearings to speak on FPL's behalf.
How right or wrong this is, is, I suppose, a matter of
debate. But one thing is for sure. FPL
used its customers' information to identify and recruit pro-FPL witnesses to
come to the public hearings and this customer information was not available to
any anti-FPL groups. The equivalent action would be if anti-FPL groups were
given access to FPL customer records to identify a bunch of unhappy FPL
customers who had complained, had their power turned off, had damage claims
denied, suffered numerous power outages. etc. who were then approached about
coming to the public hearing to speak against FPL. FPL's recruitment efforts
stack the deck and turn "public hearings" into "members of the
public vs. friends of FPL" hearings.
And all of this is perfectly fine with the FPSC commissioners and the FPSC
staff who are right there with full knowledge of, and in full cooperation with, all this.
Not having any actual knowledge of administrative law or FPSC
proceedings, I entered the FPSC rate case litigation process relying on the
actual Florida governing statutes. The Florida statutes that specify the duties
and standards for rates, etc. This was, admittedly, a rookie mistake and
understandably, a body of custom, practice, and decision has evolved which
governs day to day reality in a way that statutory principles cannot.
However, in the case of the FPSC and FPL, the day to day
customs, practices and decisions have been used to wash the statutory
principles away as much as possible.
Two of the more basic statutory principles are 1) that rates
have to be fair, just and reasonable (recited numerous times in different
Florida Statutes), and 2) any type of charge to a customer is a rate.
So, leaving out the details of my intimidation and
manipulation by FPSC staff attorney Keino Young, I was compelled to bring forth
issues at the officially not mandatory "informal issue
identification" meetings and I
basically raised the solar power issues and applied the statutory language to
the various "rates". In other words, is the new increased monthly
customer charge "fair, just and reasonable", ditto the new late fee,
the new base rates, the new returned payment fees, etc. I applied statutory
language saying rate increases have to have a cost basis to new late fees,
etc. All of these proposed issues were
submitted in writing before the "informal meeting".
Then FPSC staff attorney Keino Young called me up right
before the meeting and told me that "staff" felt that ALL my issues
were "subsumed" to other issues. Most of which other issues were
broadly and ambiguously defined, not as issues of law or of fact, but in the
form of "Is the ____ rate increase
appropriate". Coincidentally, at the actual issue identification meeting
some minutes later, the exact same words came out of the mouth of the FPL
attorney: FPL believes all of my issues are "subsumed" to other
issues.
Let me be clear what "subsumed" means. It means
that throughout the subsequent rate case, including the final briefs and FPSC Commissioners
voting on the individual issues, the actual statutory standards set by the
legislature will never be directly argued or voted on.
I stuck to my issues and one of the Commissioners sitting as
Pre-Hearing Officer had to rule on them. At the Pre-Hearing Conference in
Tallahassee the Pre-Hearing Officer ruled every statutory issue I raised was
"subsumed" to other issues. The process would go like this:
FPSC Commissioner: "What is FPL's position?"
FPL attorney:
"FPL believes the issue
is subsumed to other issues"
FPSC Commissioner: "Staff?"
Staff:
"Staff agrees with FPL"
FPSC Commissioner: "Ruling for FPL"
And this is pretty much how it went, not just with my
issues, but with most opposition to FPL, whether from the Office of Public
Counsel ("OPC"), Florida Retail Federation, or other intervenors.
Eventually I had two core issues left. The first being the
statute that states the FPSC must consider alternative energy efforts in rate
increase cases. The second being that
the overall rate increase (as opposed to each subsidiary rate) was statutorily
required to be fair, just and reasonable (thereby allowing this to be directly
argued to the FPSC).
The Pre-Hearing Officer ruled for FPL on the alternative energy
issue, after staff apparently stated overtly for the first time that the
rationale for excluding the issue is that the clean renewable energy issue is
handled in the "Energy Conservation Cost Recovery" Clause proceeding
(which is a pass through proceeding where the costs of environmental efforts claimed
by FPL are charged to customers, seemingly the exact opposite of what the
statute would seem to require which is that environmental efforts be considered
for reward or punishment (i.e. via profit or other incentives) in rate increase
request proceedings.)
The transcript of this is as follows:
MR.
NELSON: I, I understand,
I understand about the conservation goals being a separate proceeding. But in,
in Section 366.82(10) it says, The Commission shall also consider the
performance of each utility pursuant to the Energy Conservation Act when establishing
rates for those utilities over which the Commission has rate setting authority.
And that's a separate subparagraph from any of the subparagraphs talking about
achievement of the goals or setting of the goals.
COMMISSIONER
GRAHAM: Staff?
MS.
HELTON: Mr. Chairman, Mr.
Nelson, it's my belief that that provision that you just read to us from the
FEECA statute, which is the -- I knew I shouldn't have said that -- the Florida
Energy Efficiency and Conservation Act, relates to the annual clause proceeding
that the Commission holds every year in November for cost recovery, for
conservation costs. That's also known as the ECCR clause, innovation -- energy
conservation cost recovery. There's two different -- there's different types of
ratemaking processes here at the Commission, and that docket, the ECCR docket
is designed to address the cost recovery for conservation costs.
MR.
NELSON: Well, I don't
know. The plain language says, The Commission shall also consider the performance
when establishing rates for those utilities over which the Commission has rate
setting authority. So it would seem to me that it's supposed to be considered
in this proceeding. That's my position.
MS.
HELTON: Not that I would
like to engage
in
argument, but the Commission has consistently interpreted that language to mean
that it is addressed in the ECCR docket.
Upon this ruling (by staff!) it became crystal clear that
further participation in the proceeding was pointless because this was not an
impartial judiciary body and day would be ruled to be night if that was what
FPL advocated (because of course there could be dense cloud cover or a solar
eclipse and so therefore day could be night and therefore day is night. FPSC:
"ruling for FPL, day is held to be night".)
My last issue, whether the overall rate increase was
"fair, just and reasonable" was strenuously argued (much as a last
stand at the Alamo) by me and was supported by the Florida Retail Federation,
and Thomas Saporito in that the central statutory standard should appear
somewhere as an actual issue. Clearly angered and flustered by the
confrontation, the Commissioner sitting as Pre-hearing Officer stated he would
make a ruling "by noon tomorrow" and then ruled against the issue
outside the presence of the parties.
The transcript of that portion of the Pre-Hearing Conference
follows:
COMMISSIONER
GRAHAM: Mr. Nelson.
MR. NELSON: Your
Honor, in the, in the proposed hearing order FPL indicates only that they believe
it's subsumed under Issue 126, and that's not going to address the issue. The
new issues that they claim it's subsumed under, I'm not going to, to address that.
May I, may I speak to the issue, or do you want to hear their objections
further?
COMMISSIONER
GRAHAM: Well, he listed
three or four other ones.
MR.
NELSON: All right. Very
good. Okay. My position is this is the ultimate issue in this case. There's
four separate statutes that say that the decision that this Commission has to
make, that this full Commission has to vote on is whether the rates are, both
the proposed rates and the existing rates are fair, reasonable, just, and
compensatory. And how you define this issues defines how, how the Commissioners
will vote, it defines how the issues will be argued, it defines how the issues
will be
briefed.
FPL's position as set down here is that it's subsumed to Issue Number 126. And
Issue Number 126 is is the operating revenue increase of FPL appropriate? And
if, if this Commission accepts that argument, then in my mind that is saying
that the public interest in fair, reasonable, and just and compensatory rates
is subsumed to the interest of the revenue of FPL. And, and to me it's as
simple as that. That's the statutory standard. To be able to argue that
something
is fair,
reasonable, just, and compensatory allows you to argue the entire universe of,
of the fairness of the issue, which is the ultimate issue the Commissioners
will be,
will be deciding. And to exclude that issue is to simply say, you know, the
interest here that we are concerned with is, is the revenue required of FPL
and,
and
fairness is subsumed to that.
COMMISSIONER
GRAHAM: Florida Power
& Light, what are the other issues that you mentioned?
MR.
BUTLER: Commissioner,
it's Issues 126, 142, and 144 we had identified specifically. But this is
essentially just the ultimate question. I mean, to
some
extent every issue in the case is about, you know, reaching a conclusion on
whether our proposed rates are fair, just, and reasonable, compensatory. So it
just,
it seems
like it's restating something that doesn't need to be restated. But the
specific issues that I had mentioned were 126, 142, and 144.
MR.
LAVIA: Mr. Commissioner,
this is J. Lavia for Retail Federation. We took a position on this issue and we
should -- think it should be included. It is the ultimate issue. And as the
ultimate issue, it's hard to argue that it's been subsumed under non-ultimate
issues. I think it is fair to include this. We think it should be included. We
think it's appropriate for the Commission to actually vote on this issue. This
is the
statutory
standard. Thank you.
MR.
SAPORITO: Commissioner
Graham, this is Thomas Saporito. I took a position on this issue too, and I
agree with the prior counsels' statements.
COMMISSIONER
GRAHAM: Staff?
MR.
YOUNG: I think staff
agrees with Florida Power & Light that inherently by Commission findings the,
the remaining issues are proving, proving any part
of FPL's
request, it is ultimately finding it fair, reasonable, and just and we believe
it's subsumed.
COMMISSIONER
GRAHAM: I was just
getting ready to say to me this question is basically what the rate case is all
about. And all the 100 and 200 issues for
the most
part all roll into answering that question. So why is it needed?
MR.
NELSON: In my opinion
it's needed so that it can be directly argued, it can be directly briefed and
not subsumed into subsidiary issues of what's the
correct
ROE or what's the correct revenue requirement. To me that is making things
completely backwards, that you determine the, the ROE and then you determine
the
revenue
requirement and then you determine where you're going to put the revenue
requirement. And, you know, you have to put it here or put it somewhere else.
And
that is
not in my mind how you determine what's fair, just, and reasonable in this
case. And I don't think the members of the public or the members of the public
that
testified at the public hearings would think that that's a reasonable way to determine
what is fair, just, and reasonable in this case.
The pro-FPL bias was present throughout the proceedings. FPL
attorneys nudged every issue, every precedent, every gray area; they chipped
away at every principle until the whole resembled nothing.
As one last example from the public service hearings: every
party (FPL, OPC myself, etc.) was given a fixed number of minutes for their
presentation to the public. As a nervous newbie, never "on the lights" before, I was very conscious of
the time of my first presentation in the Miami public service hearing. But
somehow FPL ended up with 11 minutes to speak instead of its allotted eight. (I
embarrassingly initially jumped up and objected to this). Over the course of
the public hearings I figured out how this was going on. The timekeeper (the
Chairman of the FPSC) would not start the timing until each speaker's
introduction had finished. So I would say: "My name is Larry Nelson and I
am a private citizen who came here today to speak in favor of alternative energy
and against this rate increase", or whatever, and then the timing light
would go on. But in the case of FPL, a first FPL employee made lengthy
introductory comments (including the
comments about going to the customer service room to resolve your problems) before
the main FPL representative spoke and the timing didn't start until the second
FPL speaker started speaking.
In this
way FPL's army of attorneys and representatives fight every fight forever. For
every fight they win, there is another fight right next to it pushing one
little step farther and they just keep pushing the FPSC more into pro-FPL
territory. Apparently in the academic literature of regulation (!) this is
known as the "repeat player problem".
The FPL rate "settlement" approved today
which excludes OPC is a perfect example of this. The underlying
"precedent" allowing this, according to FPL, is the 2004 case of South
Florida Hospital and Healthcare Association v. Jaber, 887 So. 2d 1210, in which a party that was not OPC, was
held not to be necessary to a settlement, in a case that was not a rate case,
but rather was a special proceeding initiated by the FPSC under its own
jurisdiction, and did not involve a rate increase but rather a rate decrease
shared by all parties including the non-settling, non-OPC party. In the law
this isn't even "dicta", let alone "precedent". But to FPL
it is an argument, and that is all they need. Under FPL's reasoning, they could
have drafted a "settlement" with me while I was in the case, giving
me free electricity for life, then used the "settlement" with me to agree
with me as to what the rates for all the other ratepayers should be.
The history
of the law creating the Office of Public Counsel is pretty clear that the FPSC
was not living up to its charge under Florida Statutes 366.01 that:
"The regulation of public utilities as
defined herein is declared to be in the public interest and this chapter shall
be deemed to be an exercise of the police power of the state for the protection
of the public welfare and all the provisions hereof shall be liberally
construed for the accomplishment of that purpose."
Therefore
the Office of Public Counsel was created to give the residential utility
customers a representative and advocate of somewhat similar skill and resources
to that of the utility companies. A normal system of judicial process or
settlement by the parties would seem to be reasonable and similar to what might
occur in an actual court case. But the outcome that FPL and the FPSC engineered
today avoids both judicial process and actual settlement for the benefit of the
FPSC and FPL and to the detriment of the citizens of Florida. An actual ruling
on the rate case is easily reviewable by a court on long established legal and
statutory grounds. A settlement of all
the parties may well be an acceptable substitute if all parties are fully
represented. However, what happened
today was a sham masquerading as a settlement. Convoluted testimony was taken
as to abstract characteristics of settlements in an effort to claim this was a
fine settlement even though the most important party, appointed by the Florida
legislature to represent the people of Florida, vehemently refused to settle.
In that case there should be no settlement and the FPSC should have to decide
the rate case on the merits fair and square. Instead, a sham settlement among
minor parties was seen by the FPSC as a "good deal" no matter what
the Legislatively appointed citizens' representative says, and thus the
precedent was set that as long as FPL can drum up a buddy to settle with, and
present it to the FPSC, the Office of Public Counsel is no longer needed and has
no power. If OPC can't insist on a ruling on the merits of the rate case or
refuse to join an unfair settlement, then FPL and FPSC are just running the
show by themselves which is exactly how it looked from my very first day in the
proceedings.
I was
very tempted to attach hundreds of pages of exhibits to this letter and
I would still be happy to do so upon request. Virtually everything stated in
this letter is available in the form of statutes, proceedings, transcripts,
video, etc. As you can imagine, just the transcripts of the pro-FPL witnesses
at the public hearings admitting they were invited and recounting the details
are quite voluminous.
The answer to my original question of "how could
clean renewable rooftop electricity be treated so poorly?" turns out to be
quite simple. The primary way that a
utility makes money is through "return on investment"
("ROI") at a rate set by the FPSC. This means that if a utility owns
a pole that cost $100, then every year it gets a return (profit) of 10.5% (plus
another 1%, for a total of 11.5% -after taxes!). The ROI determines the "revenue
requirement" - the amount that must be charged customers to result in the
set profit. So a $100 pole = $11.50 return every year (not counting operation,
maintenance and repair which is also charged to the customers). Unfortunately
for FPL, the $40,000 photovoltaic solar systems on each of my roofs are not owned
by FPL. Therefore FPL gets zero because 11.5% on zero is zero. Therefore FPL
will never, never, never do anything but oppose rooftop photovoltaic solar
power because they cannot make money on it. No matter what lip service they
pay, or what PR they put out, they will always do everything they can to crush
it. What they will do however, is continue to build wildly expensive capital
projects (and their own massive land using, non-distributed solar farms) upon
which to have the 11.5% ROI computed. This is known as the Averch-Johnson
effect:
The Averch-Johnson effect is the tendency of utilities to over-invest in
capital compared to labor. The
short form of the Averch-Johnson effect is that permitting a rate of return on investment will have the predictable
effect of encouraging more investment than is optimal. This can manifest itself
in the “build versus buy” decisions of integrated utilities and is often cited
as a reason utilities might “gold plate” their assets. This effect can also be
observed in the “invest versus conserve” decisions that utilities face. Under
traditional regulatory rules, most utilities do not naturally turn toward
energy efficiency investment, even though such investments are usually least
cost for customers.
FPL
antipathy to rooftop solar photovoltaic energy, even though only about 1700 of
its 4.5 million customers have such systems, is shown in FPL's responses to my
interrogatories I served on them in the rate case. In those interrogatories, FPL admitted they
paid only $15,744 in total for all customer owned renewable generation in 2011
(Nelson Interrogatory No.40), mischaracterized meter aggregation as
"conjunctive billing" and therefore opposed it (Nelson Interrogatory
No. 41) and opposed changing the Administrative Code rule which prohibits
rolling over excess fall power to the following summer rather than cashing it
out and then forcing the customer to buy it back next summer at over 3 times
the price FPL paid for it. FPL stated its position (and its overall attitude towards
net-metered customers) as follows:
"The current rule already provides a
subsidy to net metered customers by allowing them to shift responsibility for
fixed costs to other customers. Paying net metered customers for any unused
energy credits at the end of the year based on the average avoided cost of
generation limits the amount of subsidy to net metered customers. Allowing such
customers to continuously roll over such credits would increase the subsidy and
FPL would oppose increasing the subsidy already provided." (FPL Answer to
Nelson Interrogatory No. 42)
I don't even know what that means. FPL gets peak
daytime and summer power from rooftop solar and exchanges off-peak nighttime
and winter power for it. FPL denies any payment for "capacity", yet
rooftop solar gives them capacity and takes load off of their system. My fear
is that what they mean by their answer is that they don't get the 11.5% ROI,
that that is the "fixed cost" they are referring to, and somehow that
makes the 1700 customers who got about $10 average each, which immediately goes
back to FPL for summer peak power and for monthly customer charges,
freeloaders. With an attitude like that, I can guarantee you that FPL is never
going to be a partner with the people of Florida in moving into a cleaner more
renewable energy future and distributed rooftop photovoltaic solar power is
never going to get a fair shake.
FPL has, through its parent company, returned 21% annual total
shareholder return to its stock holders, even in this bad economic climate,
even through the recession. In fact, according to their annual report, they
have returned 21% every year for the last ten years, or a total of 210% for the
last 10 years. Most of the anti-FPL testimony at the FPL rate case public service
hearings consisted of people begging for rates not to be raised and stating how
hard it was for many people to afford the necessities of life and how much
money FPL shareholders and executives make.
These pleas apparently fell on deaf ears because even though
all five FPSC Commissioners heard these pleas hundreds of times, they were
perfectly happy to approve rate increases for FPL that will ensure a continued
return of 21% per year for FPL shareholders or even better.
I will leave you with excerpts of some of the relevant
Florida Statutes below my signature in the form of a postscript.
December 13,
2012
________________________________
Larry
Nelson
312 Roberts Road
Nokomis, FL 34275
ps:
Excerpts of Some Governing Florida
Statutes
366.01 - The regulation of public utilities as defined herein is declared to be in the public interest and this chapter shall be deemed to be an exercise of the police power of the state for the protection of the public welfare and all the provisions hereof shall be liberally construed for the accomplishment of that purpose.
366.82 (10) The
commission shall also consider the performance of each utility pursuant to ss. 366.80-366.85 and 403.519 when establishing rates for those
utilities over which the commission has ratesetting authority.
366.80 Short title.—Sections 366.80-366.85 and 403.519 shall be known and may be cited
as the “Florida Energy Efficiency and Conservation Act.”
366.81 Legislative findings and intent.—The Legislature finds and declares that it is critical to utilize the most efficient and cost-effective demand-side renewable energy systems and conservation systems in order to protect the health, prosperity, and general welfare of the state and its citizens. Reduction in, and control of, the growth rates of electric consumption and of weather-sensitive peak demand are of particular importance.
the Legislature intends that the use of solar energy, renewable energy sources, highly efficient systems, cogeneration, and load-control systems be encouraged.
The Legislature further finds and declares that ss. 366.80-366.85 and 403.519 are to be liberally construed in order to meet the complex problems of reducing and controlling the growth rates of electric consumption and reducing the growth rates of weather-sensitive peak demand; increasing the overall efficiency and cost-effectiveness of electricity and natural gas production and use; encouraging further development of demand-side renewable energy systems; and conserving expensive resources, particularly petroleum fuels.
366.81 Legislative findings and intent.—The Legislature finds and declares that it is critical to utilize the most efficient and cost-effective demand-side renewable energy systems and conservation systems in order to protect the health, prosperity, and general welfare of the state and its citizens. Reduction in, and control of, the growth rates of electric consumption and of weather-sensitive peak demand are of particular importance.
the Legislature intends that the use of solar energy, renewable energy sources, highly efficient systems, cogeneration, and load-control systems be encouraged.
The Legislature further finds and declares that ss. 366.80-366.85 and 403.519 are to be liberally construed in order to meet the complex problems of reducing and controlling the growth rates of electric consumption and reducing the growth rates of weather-sensitive peak demand; increasing the overall efficiency and cost-effectiveness of electricity and natural gas production and use; encouraging further development of demand-side renewable energy systems; and conserving expensive resources, particularly petroleum fuels.
366.03 - All rates and charges made,
demanded, or received by any public utility for any service rendered, or to be
rendered by it, and each rule and regulation of such public utility, shall be
fair and reasonable.
366.041 - In fixing the just, reasonable, and compensatory rates, charges, fares, tolls, or rentals to be observed and charged for service within the state by any and all public utilities under its jurisdiction, the commission is authorized to give consideration, among other things, to the efficiency, sufficiency, and adequacy of the facilities provided and the services rendered; the cost of providing such service and the value of such service to the public; the ability of the utility to improve such service and facilities; and energy conservation and the efficient use of alternative energy resources;
366.05 - In the exercise of such jurisdiction, the commission shall have power to prescribe fair and reasonable rates and charges . . .
366.06 - . . . the commission shall have the authority to determine and fix fair, just, and reasonable rates that may be requested, demanded, charged, or collected by any public utility for its service. The commission shall investigate and determine the actual legitimate costs of the property of each utility company, actually used and useful in the public service . . . In fixing fair, just, and reasonable rates for each customer class, the commission shall, to the extent practicable, consider the cost of providing service to the class, as well as the rate history, value of service, and experience of the public utility; the consumption and load characteristics of the various classes of customers; and public acceptance of rate structures.
12 comments:
Great posting. Thank you. Very enlightening. We need to spread the word. It's a rigged game.
How can anyone call Daphne Campbell honorable?
WOW, this is the most interesting and enlightening post of a very good blog. Keep up the good work!!!!
Oh the work that The Herald should be doing....
This is a super sophisticated and spot-on assessment of the state of play in Florida. Good job Larry.
And on it goes: http://www.forbes.com/sites/williampentland/2015/12/27/buffetts-bolshevik-dissecting-nv-energys-soviet-style-sabotage-of-distributed-energy/2/
Larry Nelson
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