House Democrats Introduce National Feed-in Tariff for Renewable Energy Projects

U.S. Representatives Jay Inslee (D-WA), Bill Delahunt (D-MA), Jim McDermott (D-WA), and Mike Honda (D-CA) introduced landmark legislation [PDF] on Thursday that will provide security for investments in the renewable-energy sector by guaranteeing rates for renewable-energy generation. This policy mechanism, also known as a national feed-in tariff, may be the single most effective tool to expand renewable energy development that we know of. Feed-in tariffs have been introduced in several U.S. states, but none have the bills have been passed into law.

The International Energy Agency, the European Commission and the United Kingdom’s Stern Review have determined that feed-in tariff policies in Germany, Spain, France and other European Union countries have achieved larger renewable energy deployment at lower costs, compared with policies in other European Union countries.

The legislation has two principle titles. The first would streamline interconnection standards and the patchwork of policies currently governing interconnection. The second title addresses the actual process of setting of renewable energy tariffs, and what would qualify. This bill would not only apply to the mom and pop backyard wind turbines, and rooftop solar - the tariff extends to projects as large as 20 megawatts!

As it is currently written, the tariff would be revisited no later than one year after it is enacted and every two years thereafter, thus incorporating a ratcheting mechanism that allows the rate-setters to adjust for technological advances, bottlenecks in supply chains, changes in demand, and other unforeseen stimuli that might necessitate a rate revision.

According to a statement released by the bill’s co-sponsors:

“Enacting a federal renewable-energy payments policy would streamline what could become a patchwork regulatory structure and an unstable investment climate for the U.S. domestic renewable energy market. It also would complement incentives for renewable-energy deployment, such as existing federal-tax credits as well as proposed plans to cap carbon emissions and set federal renewable-electricity requirements, among others.”

Rep. Jay Inslee:

“With hundreds of billions of dollars in capital slated for investment in the clean-energy sector in coming decades, we’d be fools if we didn’t ensure American manufacturers would be on the receiving end of this rapidly growing market.”

Rep. Bill Delahunt:

“It is time for the United States to take a leadership role in the new ‘clean energy’ economy. By giving our own consumers access to proven financial incentives and boosting demand for clean energy technology we can position the United States to become a world leader in this emerging sector of the global economy that has the potential to create thousands of new ‘green-collar’ jobs here at home.

Other Posts About Feed-in Tariffs

Illinois: Renewable Energy Feed-in Tariff Introduced in House of Representatives
Germans Debate Renewable Energy Price Supports
Feed-in Tariffs: The Quick and Dirty

Photo: Thomas Roche via Flickr under a Creative Commons License

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24 Comments

  1. In a long run this will be win-win situation. By putting more solar panel, we need less oil, we emit less green house gas. Sooner or latter United nation will come with regulation which force USA to adopt other alternative energy solution to limit the green house gas emission. Afterall we are the highest consuming nation and that is not fair to rest of the world.

  2. [...] House Democrats Introduce National Feed-in Tariff for Renewable Energy Projects [...]

  3. [...] they can, allowing Germany to get 14.2 percent of its energy from renewable sources. Though Inslee’s legislation has little hope of getting through this Congress (they are still stalling on renewing the existing [...]

  4. [...] drilling for oil is restarted after a gap of 26 years. But the problem in passing a similar bill to initiate a nationwide feed-in tariff program is that the profits of the big utilities would come [...]

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