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Rethinking the utility company as solar power heats up - YouTube
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JUDY WOODRUFF: Now: As the Trump administration
is considering whether to put tariffs on solar
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panels made outside the U.S., the rapidly
plummeting price of solar panels has led to
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a boom in rooftop installations and jobs.
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The solar industry now employs almost three
times as many people as the coal industry.
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This growth is also raising questions about
how utility companies should respond.
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William Brangham is back with this report
from Vermont.
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It is part of our occasional series of reports
Peril and Promise: The Challenge of Climate
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Change.
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It's also our weekly look at the Leading Edge
of science and technology.
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WILLIAM BRANGHAM: Andrea McMahon and her son
Caulder (ph) run a dog kennel and grooming
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business just outside Waterbury, Vermont.
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During the recent windstorm that knocked power
out for hundreds of thousands of people in
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the Northeast, the lights and blow dryers
stayed on at their business.
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That's because McMahon had just installed
these: two brand-new Tesla batteries connected
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to the solar panels on her roof.
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All your neighbors were out of power, but
you weren't?
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ANDREA MCMAHON, Solar Customer: No.
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No.
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We -- it worked.
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WILLIAM BRANGHAM: McMahon installed the panels
five years ago.
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In the summer, with its ample sun, they generate
more electricity than she can use, so the
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extra energy is sent to the local utility,
Green Mountain Power.
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ANDREA MCMAHON: And they credit our bill for
the winter, which we use up in the winter,
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because there's not quite as much solar working
in the winter.
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WILLIAM BRANGHAM: Right.
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ANDREA MCMAHON: But we basically have no electric
bill.
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And it's usually pretty big.
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WILLIAM BRANGHAM: No electric bill?
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ANDREA MCMAHON: No electric bill.
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WILLIAM BRANGHAM: You went from paying about
$200, $250 a month to now paying nothing?
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ANDREA MCMAHON: Right.
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Yes.
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Nice, huh?
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WILLIAM BRANGHAM: The new batteries, which
she leases from Green Mountain Power for $30
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a month, will allow McMahon to, in effect,
become her own personal power plant.
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She can operate independently from the grid
when power outages occur, and she can sell
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electricity back to the utility during peak
usage, even when the sun isn't shining.
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ANDREA MCMAHON: What we're not using here
is going over here to the grid.
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Kind of a win-win-win situation.
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WILLIAM BRANGHAM: Green Mountain Power CEO
Mary Powell also thinks it's a win-win.
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In fact, she's the driving force behind her
company's expanded push into solar and batteries
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and new energy technology.
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On the
day we met her, she was checking in with line
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men who were still at work restoring power
to customers.
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Powell likes to describe her company as an
un-utility.
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MARY POWELL, CEO, Green Mountain Power: One
of the things we really feel like we're in
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the business of doing here in Vermont is accelerating
what we believe is a consumer-led revolution
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to distributed resources and a completely
different model.
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WILLIAM BRANGHAM: Powell calls existing utility
models grandpa's electric grid, powered in
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large part by coal, as well as natural gas,
hydro and nuclear power.
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Indeed, the bulk of Green Mountain's power
comes from such sources.
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But she says it's an inefficient system.
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MARY POWELL: On a good day, the system is
built for about 40 to like 43 percent economic
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efficiency.
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You have massive power-generating stations,
and you move energy over miles and miles and
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miles.
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You have substations that convert it down
to distribution level.
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You then have miles and miles of distribution
lines, and eventually you get to homes, businesses
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and communities.
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WILLIAM BRANGHAM: Powell's vision is to begin
to move away from that, to using a series
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of commercial and residential micro-grids
all over the state that can store and share
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power with each other.
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A micro-grid is any small self-contained network,
like this housing community, where, if they
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get cut off from the main electrical supply,
they can generate enough electricity to meet
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all of their needs right here.
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This 14-unit development in Waltham, Vermont,
was built by industry and nonprofit groups
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in a first-of-its-kind experiment for low-income
housing.
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Each home has a six-kilowatt solar panel system
connected to a battery, so in the case of
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an outage, residents can power their homes
independently.
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And residents like Alexis LaBerge pay nothing
for electricity.
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ALEXIS LABERGE, Solar Customer: I wasn't quite
sure what to expect when they were like, oh,
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we're building some solar-powered housing,
and it's going to be energy-efficient.
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And it's really reasonable.
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And, as a single parent, that's obviously
really important.
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(LAUGHTER)
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WILLIAM BRANGHAM: CEO Powell concedes that
it's easier to re-imagine a power system in
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a rural state like hers, with just 600,000
residents.
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But she's convinced that even more populous
cities and states need to change the way they
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think about energy delivery.
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MARY POWELL: I drive around different parts
of Brooklyn or Queens, and there are, you
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know, neighborhood after neighborhood where
you could be delivering absolute energy transformation
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services, lowering the energy costs of the
people that you serve, because you're looking
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at it from a total energy perspective.
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WILLIAM BRANGHAM: Fifteen miles south lies
another vision for changing energy delivery.
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Florida Power and Light, the largest utility
in Florida, is in the midst of a large-scale
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solar construction boom.
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This site was one of the first, built nine
years ago.
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The company now has six other sites, enough
to power about 60,000 homes.
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WILLIAM BRANGHAM: Kelly Fagan oversees the
solar construction.
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KELLY FAGAN, Florida Power and Light: We have
three plants we just commissioned at the end
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of last year.
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We have got four more behind that, and we
have four more the next year behind that.
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WILLIAM BRANGHAM: Those utility scale arrays
will use more than 2.5 million solar panels
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to generate electricity for the grid, making
Florida 10th in the nation for solar generation.
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Even so, it will be a small fraction compared
to their nuclear and gas resources.
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Fagan says it's all about doing what's best
for its customers.
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KELLY FAGAN: If we go too far in solar, we
lose the reliability of our system.
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That's why we still need our gas plants and
our nuclear plants.
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They are the backbone of the system.
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They keep us running.
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They keep us going when the clouds are out,
when the rain is falling and when it's nighttime.
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SUSAN GLICKMAN, Southern Alliance For Clean
Energy: Historically, despite our nickname
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of the Sunshine State, Florida has really
lagged behind in adopting solar.
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WILLIAM BRANGHAM: Susan Glickman is a lobbyist
with Southern Alliance For Clean Energy, and
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she has been a loud critic of Florida's private
utilities.
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She applauds their recent solar building spree,
but thinks they game the system by continuing
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to build expensive conventional power plants.
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SUSAN GLICKMAN: Big monopoly utilities get
a guaranteed range of a rate of return on
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their capital expenditures.
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WILLIAM BRANGHAM: Meaning, if they build a
power plant, they're by law allowed to charge
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all you customers here in Florida to pay back
the cost of that?
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SUSAN GLICKMAN: That's right.
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Florida regulators will put that in the rate
base, and we will all pay for it.
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So, like a waiter in a restaurant where there's
a guaranteed tip, the more that is spent,
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if you buy dessert or you get a bottle of
wine, the more money they're going to make.
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WILLIAM BRANGHAM: Glickman also says utility
companies have tried to put up roadblocks
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so that homeowners won't install their own
solar panels.
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She points out that the utility here spent
tens of millions of dollars backing a failed,
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and widely criticized, 2016 ballot measure
that would've curtailed individual solar projects.
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SUSAN GLICKMAN: They want to build power plants,
and too often they see rooftop solar as a
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threat to that business model.
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WILLIAM BRANGHAM: Florida Power and Light
says it doesn't discourage residential solar,
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but says it isn't very practical.
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KELLY FAGAN: FPL is providing solar power
through our transmission grid at such a low
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cost, it's very difficult to put rooftop solar,
even on my own house.
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I have looked at it on my own house.
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The payback is not very good in Florida because
our bills are so low.
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WILLIAM BRANGHAM: So, you're arguing that
because you guys have provided a lower utility
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bill overall, that, on balance, it doesn't
make sense for people to do solar individually.
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KELLY FAGAN: Yes, that's correct.
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Financially, it just doesn't make sense.
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WILLIAM BRANGHAM: But that may be changing.
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Solar panels have dropped dramatically in
price, some 70 percent over the last seven
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years.
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When we visited Glickman, she was having panels
installed on her house, and she says she knows
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more and more people who are doing the same.
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SUSAN GLICKMAN: I do think there are some
people that want to go solar for environmental
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reasons.
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But more and more people want to go solar
for economic reasons, because they see the
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payoff.
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Solar panels are improving.
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They are more efficient.
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They can operate even with less solar radiance,
so the demand is really there.
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WILLIAM BRANGHAM: If that demand continues
to grow, Florida utilities may move more into
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rooftop solar, joining Vermont and other states
where residential solar micro-grids are becoming
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almost commonplace.
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For the "PBS NewsHour," I'm William Brangham
in Arcadia, Florida.
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JUDY WOODRUFF: Fascinating.
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