solar

NJ’s Hunterdon County aims to save $123K in electric costs by using renewable energy sources

Caroline Fassett reports for NJ.com

Beginning Oct. 1, an electric service contract will require up to 48% of electric power used by Hunterdon County government to come from renewable energy sources.

In place of the current state standard JCP&L rate of 8.929 cents per kilowatt-hour, through the contract, the county will pay an electric service enhanced renewable rate of 8.103 cents per kilowatt-hour.

This could bring nearly $123,000 in electric cost savings for the county over the next two years, or between 9% and 10% of what the county spent on electricity in 2018.

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According to County Administrator Kevin P. Davis, in October, up to 43% of the electricity used by the county will be drawn from renewable sources — 23% higher than the state standard requirement.

Next year, when the state standard requirement increases from 20% to 28%, the county will receive up to 48% of its electricity from renewable sources in alignment with the electric service contract.

The contract, approved by Hunterdon County Freeholders on Aug. 20, continues to Sept. 30, 2021.

Of the 26 municipalities in Hunterdon County, nine agreed to also participate in the contract: Alexandria, Bloomsbury, Califon, Delaware, East Amwell, Flemington, Frenchtown, Kingwood and Raritan.

These municipalities will elect to either imitate the county and seek to have up to 48% of its electricity drawn from renewable sources, or purchase electricity through a provider that adheres to state renewable energy requirements.

Davis said if any of the municipalities fail to elect an option by Sept. 12, that municipality will automatically receive electricity that aligns with state renewable energy standards.

If all nine municipalities elect the “green” option, they will cumulatively save approximately $30,000 in electric costs over the course of two years, Davis said.

“The whole reason behind doing everything that we did was in an attempt to save money for the county and for the municipalities as well,” Lanza said. “If this reverse auction did not yield a satisfactory result, we were free to reject the bid. Since it worked for us and for everybody else, we accepted the bid.”

Concord Energy Services, along with the county’s Purchasing Division, organized the online reverse auction bidding process and coordinated the participation of the Hunterdon municipal governments in the shared service program at no direct cost to the county.

Davis said that he hopes more municipalities in the county will participate in the contract in 2021.

“We anticipate, in two years – if we do this again, which I think we would because shared services is a big deal in Hunterdon County – more towns will join in,” Davis said.

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NC wants to collect some of the $1B it gave in tax breaks for solar farms

Lynn Bonner reports for the Charlotte Observer

The state has handed out about $1 billion in tax breaks to companies and individuals that invested in solar farms. Now the state tax collector is looking to cancel some of those breaks and collect the money.

Anxiety among tax attorneys and companies that claimed tax credits and their fight with the state Department of Revenue has been burbling for more than a year.

This month, Monarch Private Capital, a tax-credit broker based in Georgia, asked Revenue Secretary Ronald Penny to renounce the department’s position through an administrative process called a “declaratory ruling.”

Monarch Private Capital offers state and federal tax credits to companies and individuals looking to lower their tax bills.

Schorr Johnson, a spokesman for the state Department of Revenue, said in an interview last month and in emails last month and Thursday that state law prohibits the department from discussing tax audits.

“We cannot comment on ongoing audits or any potential litigation,” Johnson wrote Thursday.

The state offered a 35% tax credit to investors in renewable energy projects. The tax credit, along with other state polices encouraging renewable energy, helped make North Carolina one of the top states in the nation in solar farm capacity, The News & Observer has reported.

The renewable energy tax credit ended in 2015, but investors were given a few more years to claim the tax breaks.

Over the last nine years, the state allowed more than $1 billion in tax breaks for investments in renewable energy property, according to theDepartment of Revenue reports.

A September public notice from the tax department said some people who invested in credits through partnerships don’t qualify for tax breaks.

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