Post on 13-Jan-2015
description
Show Me the Money: Federal and State Public Funding, Benefits and Subsidy
Programs for Ocean Marine Renewables
Carolyn ElefantLaw Offices of Carolyn Elefant/OceanRenewable
Energy Coalition (OREC)
Hydrovision Conference, Sacramento CaliforniaJuly 18, 2008
U.S. Federal and State Public Benefits & Incentives for Wave, Tidal, HydroKinetic: Topics
• The Color of Money
• “Show Me the Money” (Jerry Maquire)
• “Follow the Money” (Deep Throat)
Earmarks
• Very situation specific, so hard to track• Need experienced lobbyists to get real $$s
- not a DIY operation
• Examples of Earmarks: $3.28 million to company for developing wave
energy project & improved mooring system (HR 108-622)(Federal)
$8.5 million for solar in Florida (state earmark information on ocean energy difficult to find)
Funding Programs: Federal
• Department of Energy
SBIR grant programs (ongoing, small amounts for early stage R&D)
State Energy Programs (DOE funding to states for renewables)
$7.5 Million Funding by RFP Awards announced end of July 2008 $3-$5 million for advanced project testing (up to 8 awards, 50%
cost share) $1.-$2.5 million for market accelerators (up to 6 awards, no cost
share)• Resource assessment, transmission integration, and regulatory
streamlining $1.5-$2.5 million for National Marine Renewable Centers (up to 3
awards, 50 % cost share)
Federal Funding - Appropriations
• Appropriations Legislation
House Bill - $30 million for marine renewables; $10 million for hydro
Senate Bill - $30 million for entire water power program
• No action likely in this Congress
State (Taxpayer) Funding Programs
• Extremely Varied - Examples:
NYSERDA - $2.5 Million to bring Verdant RITE Project to commercial
OWET - $4.2 million in funding from Oregon to help develop & promote projects, conduct studies to aid commercialization of industry
Maine Technology Institute - $200,000 to ORPC to test tidal turbines
State Ratepayer Funded Programs
• See http://www.cleanenergystates.org/ for overview of all state clean energy programs
• CA Emerging Renewable Resource Program PG&E seeks $30 million, w/$$s for Wave Connect - CPUC
approves funds, then allows recovery through rates to bundled customers - PG&E requested $6million but rec’d. only $2 million
• NJ Renewable Energy & Develop. Fund $500,000 to OPT to deploy wave energy buoy
• RI Renewable Energy Fund $4 Million + low cost loans to Oceanlinx
Loan Programs
• CREBs (Clean Energy Renewable Bonds)- for public projects, including marine renewables
• DOE Loan Guarantee Program Just implemented, up to 100% guaranteed,
provided that developer usesFederal Financing Bank (otherwise 80%)
• Many states have loans & loan guarantees See www.dsire.com for state-by-state summary
Tax Credits & Incentives
• State - see www.dsireusa.org
• Federal HR 6049 - PTC extender (1.9cents/kwh) Expands PTC to include marine renewables &
extends PTC through 2011 (only extends wind PTC 1 year) Cost - $7 billion/10 years Status:
Won’t pass House Paygo w/out cutbacks elsewhere
Renewable Portfolio Standard
• No federal RPS• State RPS
Need to meet aggressive RPS drives clean energy programs
42 states have RPS and in most, wave, tidal and hydrokinetic will allow utilities to meet RPS obligations. Source: www.dsireusa.org
Feed In Tariff
• Highlights of Proposed Inslee Legislation (7/08)
FERC will set Uniform national Renewable Energy Payment (REP) rates at levels that would provide for a 10% ROR on renewable investment, with rates differentiated by technology type & size
Utilities reimbursed for cost of REP purchases and interconnection through pass-through to a privately-run national renewable energy corporation (RenewCorps).
RenewCorps would levy systems benefit charge on every electric consumer in the U.S.
No double dip - companies that get REP rates don’t get other fed incentives or state RECs
Utilities would earn any associated RECs, to meet compliance with state RPS.
Feed In Tariffs - States
• States with feed-in tariffs California, Illinois, Michigan, Minnesota,
and Hawaii. In California, feed in tariff ranges from 8
to 30 cents, available for large and small renewable projects
Many other states are considering feed-in - trend to follow
Renewable Energy Credits
• Most states with RPS programs have RECs. 1 REC = 1 MW/hr of renewable energy.
• RECs from projects in RPS states are more valuable than those in non-RPS states
• REC prices range from .005/kWh to $.056/kWh -http://www.eere.energy.gov/greenpower/markets/certificates.shtml?page=1 (DOE Table)
Carbon Offsets - “Wave of the Future”
• What is an offset - from wikipedia: A carbon offset is a financial instrument representing a reduction in greenhouse
gas emissions. Although there are six primary categories of greenhouse gases,[1] carbon offsets are measured in metric tons of carbon dioxide-equivalent (CO2e). One carbon offset represents the reduction of one metric ton of carbon dioxide, or its equivalent in other greenhouse gases.
At present, only voluntary markets, can be certified
Cheapest offsets in voluntary markets w/no verification
W/Cap and trade, offsets will provide another benefit for marine renewables (but may not be able to “double count” REC and offset)
Follow the Money: Keeping Track of Programs
• Cleanenergystates.org• Dsireusa.org• DOE Website• Grants.gov• State PUC and utility websites• Google newsfeeds on grants, awards,
marine renewables
Contact Information
• For additonal information, contact: Carolyn Elefant, Law Offices of Carolyn
Elefant, Washington DC 202-297-6100/carolynelefant@fercfights
.com Ocean Renewable Energy Coalition 301-869-3790