Wisconsin Governor’s Task Force Calls for Feed-in Tariffs

By Paul Gipe

 

Governor Jim Doyle’s Task Force on Global Warming has called for implementation of Advanced Renewable Tariffs to encourage the development of the state’s renewable energy resources.

The recommendation is contained in a massive new report on how Wisconsin can reduce its emissions of global warming gases. The call for Advanced Renewable Tariffs, or renewable energy payments, is but one of many measures recommended.

However, the recommendation is the first time that an advisory committee to a U.S. governor has formally endorsed the policy common in continental Europe. It follows on the California Energy Commission’s proposal of feed-in tariffs as a remedy for the failures of the state’s Renewable Portfolio Standard, and premier Gordon Campbell’s call for feed-in tariffs in the Canadian province of British Columbia.

The action is another sign of growing acceptance of the policy mechanism that has fueled the rapid growth of Germany and Spain’s renewable energy industry.

Implicit in the task force’s recommendation is that Wisconsin’s Public Service Commission has the authority to establish feed-in tariffs without specific enabling legislation. The PSC has already initiated a proceeding that may explore how to design the program.

Support for inclusion of the recommendation in the Task Force’s report came from RENEW Wisconsin and Clean Wisconsin. RENEW Wisconsin was the first non-governmental organization in the U.S. to propose a policy of Advanced Renewable Tariffs when it filed testimony with the PSC in the fall of 2006. At the time, RENEW Wisconsin’s Michael Vickerman argued that renewable tariffs should be based on the cost of generation. His filing was a significant departure from the position of most American NGOs involved in renewable energy rate cases, putting RENEW in line with its Canadian and continental European colleagues.

Governor Doyle’s task force accepted this reasoning and specifically recommends “that these advanced renewable tariffs should be based upon the specific production costs of each particular generation technology, include a return comparable to the utilities’ allowed returns, and be fixed over a period of time that allows for full recovery of capital costs.”

Projects developed under Wisconsin’s proposed renewable tariff program will be limited to 15 MW.

The task force “recognized that Advanced Renewable Tariffs would likely result in increased costs per unit of electrical output compared to utility-scale renewable projects, but that these costs are justified by the economic and environmental advantages from encouraging distributed small-scale generation.”

For more information contact Michael Vickerman, RENEW Wisconsin, at 608 255 4044.