Metering and Rate Arrangements for
Grid-Connected Systems
The Public Utility Regulatory Policy Act of
1978 (PURPA) requires power providers to purchase excess power from
grid-connected small renewable energy systems at a rate equal to what it costs
the power provider to produce the power itself. Power providers generally
implement this requirement through various metering arrangements. Here are the
metering arrangements you are likely to encounter:
·
Net purchase and sale
Under this arrangement, two
uni-directional meters are installed one records electricity drawn from the
grid, and the other records excess electricity generated and fed back into the
grid. You pay retail rate for the electricity you use, and the power provider
purchases your excess generation at its avoided cost (wholesale rate). There
may be a significant difference between the retail rate you pay and the power
provider's avoided cost.
·
Net metering
Net metering provides the
greatest benefit to you as a consumer. Under this arrangement, a single,
bi-directional meter is used to record both electricity you draw from the grid
and the excess electricity your system feeds back into the grid. The meter
spins forward as you draw electricity, and it spins backward as the excess is
fed into the grid. If, at the end of the month, you've used more electricity
than your system has produced, you pay retail price for that extra electricity.
If you've produced more than you've used, the power provider generally pays you
for the extra electricity at its avoided cost. The real benefit of net metering
is that the power provider essentially pays you retail price for the
electricity you feed back into the grid.
Some power providers will now
let you carry over the balance of any net extra electricity your system
generates from month to month, which can be an advantage if the resource you
are using to generate your electricity is seasonal. If, at the end of the year,
you have produced more than you've used, you forfeit the excess generation to
the power provider.