State Leadership in Clean Energy: Award-Winning Programs in California & New York

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Clean Energy States Alliance Webinar State Leadership in Clean Energy: Award-Winning Programs in California & New York Hosted by Warren Leon, Executive Director, CESA July 26, 2016

Housekeeping www.cleanenergystates.org 2

CESA Members Renewable Development Fund

The 2016 State Leadership in Clean Energy Awards More information, including case studies about the winning programs and information about upcoming webinars, is available at: http://cesa.org/projects/stateleadership-in-clean-energy/2016/.

Today s Guest Speakers Lisabeth Tremblay, Assistant Project Manager, NYSERDA Luke Forster, Assistant Project Manager, NYSERDA Joe Omoletski, NSHP Program Specialist, California Energy Commission Elizabeth Hutchison, NSHP Program Lead, California Energy Commission

NY-Sun Initiative July 26, 2016

2 NY- Sun Presenters Lisabeth Tremblay Luke Forster Lisabeth.Tremblay@nyserda.ny.gov 518-862-1090 x 3632 Luke.Forster@nyserda.ny.gov 518-862-1090 x 3433

3 Agenda NY-Sun Overview NY-Sun Incentive Program (MW Block) NY-Sun Soft Cost Reduction Programs

NY-Sun Overview 4

New York s Energy Policy Reforming the Energy Vision (REV) Governor Cuomo s strategy to build a clean, resilient and affordable energy system for all New Yorkers. 5 Clean Energy Standard goal of 50% renewable by 2030. Clean Energy Fund (CEF) 10-year, $5 billion funding commitment Reshapes New York s energy efficiency, renewable energy and energy innovation programs Reduces cost of clean energy Accelerates adoption of energy efficiency to reduce load Increases renewable energy to meet demand Mobilizes private investment in clean energy

NY-Sun Initiative Significantly expand installed solar capacity Attract private investment Enable sustainable development of a robust industry Create well-paying skilled jobs Improve the reliability of the electric grid Reduce air pollution Make solar available to all New Yorkers Statewide Goal of 3 GW by 2023 Approx. $1 Billion Total Budget Self- Sustaining Market Reduce Soft Costs 6

7 New York s Solar Market Unprecedented growth 575% growth in solar from 2012 to 2015 18,313 solar projects installed in 2015 525 MW installed by 2015 enough to power nearly 85,000 homes Strong job growth 8,250 employed in solar industry in 2015 New York ranked 4 th in the U.S. for number of solar workers

NY-Sun Incentive Program 8

9 NY-Sun Incentive Program: MW Block Capacity-based cash incentive available to eligible contractors. Three Regions: Con Edison (New York City and South Westchester) Long Island Upstate (Rest- of-state or ROS) Three Sectors: Residential: up to 25 kw Small Non-residential: up to 200 kw Commercial/Industrial: >200 kw Incentive is available through Dec 29, 2023 or until funds are fully committed.

NY-Sun Incentive Program: MW Block 10 Example: Upstate Residential MW Block Structure $1.10 $1.00 $0.90 $0.80 $0.70 $0.60 $0.50 $0.40 $0.30 $0.20 $0.10 $- 1 51 101 151 201 251 MW

NY-Sun Incentive Program 11

Affordable Solar 12 Added incentive for low-to-moderate (LMI) income residents: Doubles the applicable MW Block incentive Eligibility Household Income below 80% area or state median income Requirements Energy efficiency lighting and hot water upgrades Projects must satisfy cost savings requirements No price escalators allowed for third-party-owned projects

Soft Cost Reduction Programs 13

NY-Sun Soft Cost Reduction Programs Community Solar PV Trainers Network: Assistance to local governments NY Unified Solar Permit and supporting documents Interconnection Distributed Generation Ombudsman/ Working Groups NY Soft Cost Baseline Study Technical Assistance Program Green Jobs Green NY financing Solar-Ready Vets: PV training program for military veterans Rigorous QA program: field and photo inspections 14

15 Community Solar in NY Solarize K-Solar Shared Solar

16 What is Solarize? Community-driven outreach and customer aggregation campaign Competitive selection of solar installers Limited time (6-9 months) Well-established model with room for innovation Support from NYSERDA

Solarize Results Round 1 26 campaigns participated 900 projects 8.4 MW 4,000 leads $1.4 million cost saved Avg. $1,590 saved per installation Solarize campaigns in NY 17 Round 2 30 campaigns launched spring 2016

K-Solar A joint project of the New York Power Authority (NYPA) and NYSERDA, K-Solar provides NYS school districts, at no cost or obligation, with the tools and expertise to bring solar energy to their facilities and reduce their energy costs. 18

19 Shared Solar Allows a single large installation to credit production to many remote off takers 60% minimum proportionate share of output for members less than 25 kw 40% maximum proportionate share of output for members greater than 25 kw Projects can interconnect statewide as of May 1, 2016 Net metering structure Makes solar accessible to many more New Yorkers

20 NY-Sun PV Trainers Network Offers training to help local governments and jurisdictions identify opportunities, mitigate barriers, and create programs that drive the development of PV markets through education, training, and one-on-one technical assistance. Available Trainings Include Expanding Commercial Solar with PACE Intro to Shared Solar Intro to Solar Policy Workshop Land Use and Planning for Solar Solar Procurement for Local Governments Streamlining Solar Permitting Full list available by visiting training.ny-sun.ny.gov

21 NY Unified Solar Permit Standard Solar Electric Permit for New York State Local Officials Helps to remove barriers to local economic development in the growing solar industry Simplifies and streamlines permitting for solar installers

Thank you 22 ny-sun.ny.gov

California Energy Commission New Solar Homes Partnership Program Elizabeth Hutchison Joseph Omoletski July 26, 2016 1

California Energy Commission Purpose Senate Bill 1 (SB 1, Murray, 2006) goals: 3,000 MW of installed DG solar PV capacity Self-sufficient solar industry Solar installed on 50% of new homes NSHP-specific goals: 360 MW of installed solar PV capacity PV on highly efficient residential construction 2

California Energy Commission Eligibility Requirements New residential construction In IOU electric service territory Interconnected solar energy systems > 1 kw AC Third-party verified systems and energy efficiency Eligible equipment with 10- year warranty

California Energy Commission CEC Lists of Eligible Equipment Incentive Eligible Equipment in Compliance with SB1 Guidelines 4

One-time, upfront incentive Tiered incentive structure with volumetric targets; incentives decline when megawatt targets achieved Expected Performance Based Incentive (EPBI) Incentives limited to the first 7.5 kw AC per residential unit AND incentive amount cap Market-rate housing cap: 50% Affordable housing cap: 75% California Energy Commission Incentive Structure

California Energy Commission Remaining Incentive Levels Market Rate Step Code Tier I Tier II Reserved volume (MW-AC) 8 $0.50 $0.75 $1.25 60 9 $0.35 $0.50 $1.00 65 10 $0.25 $0.35 $0.75 72 Step Code Tier I/II Reserved volume (MW-AC) 6 $1.50 $1.85 3.5 7 $1.15 $1.50 5.0 8 $0.80 $1.25 6.0 9 $0.55 $1.00 6.5 10 $0.35 $0.75 7.2 Affordable Housing 6

California Energy Commission NSHP Energy Efficiency Requirements Energy Efficiency Tier 2008 Standards 2013 Standards Code-Compliant Not available 0% Tier I 15% 15% Tier II 30%/30%* 30%/30%* * Required space cooling improvement

California Energy Commission Reservation Periods Reservation Period 36 Months 18 Months Project Types Large Development: 50%+ of homes receive solar (minimum six homes) Affordable Housing (residential or common area): 20%+ of dwelling units are income restricted Virtual Net-Metered Custom Home: single site project Small Development: fewer than six homes Solar Not as Standard: less than 50% of homes Market-Rate Common Area

California Energy Commission Involved Parties Applicant Homeowner Homebuilder/Developer Contractor Retailer/Seller Installer Efficiency and Solar Consultants Certified Energy Analyst HERS Rater

California Energy Commission The Basic Process 10

California Energy Commission Reservation Application Document Overview General Project Information NSHP-1 Proof of New Residential Construction Building Permit/Subdivision Map Commitment to Solar Calculator Form Installation Contract Energy Efficiency Building Energy Model (Title 24) Construction Plan Set

California Energy Commission Payment Claim Document Overview General Information NSHP-2 Warranty Coverage NSHP-3 Third-Party Verification Solar Verification Energy Efficiency Verification (Mandatory and Above-Code) Interconnection Interconnection Letter

California Energy Commission Go Solar California Website 13

California Energy Commission NSHP Web Tool Applicants can submit applications electronically Allows applicants to track the status Serves as collection point for program data Sign up here: https://www.newsolarhomes.org/webpages/public/lo gin.aspx 14

California Energy Commission NSHP Participants Over 75 Builders Over 30 Retailers and Installers SunPower Corporation SolarCity Corporation SunStreet Energy Group PetersenDean, Inc. KB Homes Lennar Homes Richmond American Homes Shea Homes Standard Pacific Homes TRI Pointe Homes, Inc. Photos Courtesy of Sherrill Neidich

California Energy Commission NSHP Program Totals Number of Applications Number of Systems Dollars (Millions) MW (AC) Under Review 185 4,893 Reserved 964 30,259 96.9 104.2 Installed 2,591 23,876 149.9 74.7 Total 3,740 59,028 246.8 178.9 Source: Go Solar California as of 7/6/2016 16

California Energy Commission Available Funding Dollars (millions) MW (AC) Available Funding 40.1 Under Review 11.7 18.5 Remaining Funding 28.4* Source: Go Solar California as of 7/6/2016 17

Capacity Installed (MW) Installed Systems (Thousands) 25 California Energy Commission NSHP Installations Per Year 8 20 Capacity # of Systems 7 6 15 10 5 4 3 5 2 1 0 2008 2009 2010 2011 2012 2013 2014 2015 0

California Energy Commission Progress Toward 360 MW Goal Installed, 20% Remaining, 45% Reserved, 29% Under Review, 6%

Number of Homes California Energy Commission Housing Starts and NSHP Participation Housing Starts Per Year (Single Family) 70,000 68,409 Reserved Systems (Single Family) 60,000 50,000 40,000 30,000 20,000 10,000 0 44,896 33,050 36,991 37,089 27,560 25,046 25,526 21,641 13,705 9,593 4,345 7,213 129 1,687 1,018 1,498 2,315 2007 2008 2009 2010 2011 2012 2013 2014 2015 Year

California Energy Commission Installed Systems by Energy Efficiency Level Code- Compliant, 6% All Installed Systems 2013 Building Standards Tier II, 2% Tier II, 19% Tier I, 23% Tier I, 75% Code- Compliant, 75%

MW California Energy Commission Affordable Housing Activity As of June 2016: 7.13 MW installed in affordable housing residential and common area projects (~11% of overall) $20.5 million in incentives paid to these projects (~15% of overall) 14 12 10 8 6 4 2 0 Cumulative Capacity Reserved 22

California Energy Commission Spotlight: Mutual Housing at Spring Lake 62 affordable residential units in Woodland, CA Community center Nation s first 100% zero net energy (ZNE) rental community Size: 184 kw Incentive: $384,742 Photo Credit: California Energy Commission 23

California Energy Commission Program Future CPUC approved $111.78M additional funding Upcoming workshop on program streamlining Program sunset date of June 1, 2018 Last day to pay out is December 31, 2021

California Energy Commission Contact Information Elizabeth Hutchison, NSHP Program Lead Elizabeth.Hutchison@energy.ca.gov (916) 654-3838 Renewables Call Center Renewable@energy.ca.gov (916) 653-0237 25

Thank you for attending our webinar Warren Leon Executive Director, CESA wleon@cleanegroup.org Find us online: www.cesa.org facebook.com/cleanenergystates @CESA_news on Twitter