As part of its commitment to provide clean, reliable and affordable energy, Duke Energy is inviting residential, small/medium business and income-qualified customers in Florida to register to subscribe to the company’s new community solar program – Clean Energy Connection.
Duke Energy customers can sign up for a share of renewable energy produced by solar plants across Florida and in return, receive bill credits for the solar energy generated by their participation and lower their costs over time.
A random selection process will be used to provide customers with the opportunity to subscribe without the pressure of enrolling on a first-come, first-served basis. Customers will have one week from the go-live date of April 20 to register their subscription request.
“Our customers want affordable, clean energy options, and we believe larger-scale solar is the most cost-effective way to advance the benefits of solar on our entire system,” said Melissa Seixas, Duke Energy Florida state president. “We are proud to offer this innovative program that will give customers, especially those who may not have the ability to install solar at home, an opportunity to support renewable energy while seeing real benefits.”
The program directly supports the development and construction of new solar plants interconnected to the Florida power grid.
How it works
Customers can subscribe to kilowatt blocks of solar power from the company’s Clean Energy Connection solar portfolio. The monthly subscription fee will help pay for the cost of construction and operation of the solar power plants and is conveniently added to a customer’s regular electric bill.
The monthly subscription fee is fixed at $8.35 per kW. A customer with average usage of 1,000 kWh/month could subscribe to approximately 5 kW to cover their full usage. Subscribers receive bill credits based on their subscription size and the amount of solar energy that is produced by the Clean Energy Connection solar facilities each month.
The program sets aside 26 MW for low-income customers who participate in government subsidy programs or Duke Energy’s low-income energy efficiency program, Neighborhood Energy Saver.
With program enrollment, low-income customers will see guaranteed savings on their program costs every month.
The Clean Energy Connection program is designed to utilize low-cost universal Duke Energy Florida solar facilities while delivering solar energy efficiently to and for the benefit of all our customers. It is also designed to provide participating customers with a seven-year full payback, with bill credits first exceeding subscription fees around three to five years. As long as the customer remains in the program for seven years, the annual bill credits are projected to be more than the subscription costs, creating real customer savings.
Customers who are interested in registering can learn more through the Clean Energy Connection website.
Jay says
If you read the public commission report, those comments above would be incorrect. The utility actually does not make any revenue from this program and the subscription fees actually pay to cover the construction and maintenance of the solar generation facilities. The utility is spending money on this program, not making money. The commission filing reports that it is a customer benefiting program, not revenue generating. It does take some time to break even, but the benefits far exceed the cost.
Lorie Ingraham says
Stounds good, but he article fails to mention that customers in the program will be paying more for their electric power than they do today for the first three years in the program because of the monthly subscription fee. After that, the net energy savings start between three to five years when the program bill credits start to outweigh the annual cost to subscribe. You only start to save on your electric bill after 5 years in the program. This is only a win for the power company.
Solarman says
“Customers can subscribe to kilowatt blocks of solar power from the company’s Clean Energy Connection solar portfolio. The monthly subscription fee will help pay for the cost of construction and operation of the solar power plants and is conveniently added to a customer’s regular electric bill.”
For many folks who live in condos, apartments and HOA communities’ “subscription” may be the way to go. Unfortunately, this $8.35/kW subscription fee reminds me of what “California” was trying to foist upon current solar PV adopters. Any time you allow a middleman in your daily energy needs, you are costing yourself money. You only gain when your “purchase” eliminates the middleman from your daily energy requirements. Folks who go the solar PV and smart ESS also have resiliency available to them, when the grid fails during storms. The “subscription” service not so much.