December 20, 2018
Fourth Quarter Newsletter

Friends,

After ten years in existence, the Clean Coalition is accelerating the realization of its  25 x 25 vision : From 2025 onward, at least 25% of newly added electricity generation capacity in the United States will be from local renewable energy sources.

Community Microgrids are the most effective approach to realizing this vision, and the Clean Coalition’s  Community Microgrid initiatives in the San Francisco Bay Area, the Santa Barbara area, and San Diego illuminate the pathway. These initiatives showcase how local renewables and other distributed energy resources (DER), like energy storage, demand response, and load shedding, deliver an unparalleled trifecta of economic, environmental, and resilience benefits to communities.
Leveraging our Peninsula Advanced Energy Community (PAEC) Initiative , the Clean Coalition is staging Community Microgrids in areas devastated by recent wildfires and landslides — bringing vital resilience to the impacted communities. Our North Bay Community Resilience Initiative is providing an example of how to build back right after disasters. 
In the Goleta Load Pocket, a highly transmission-vulnerable region that spans 70 miles of coastline encompassing the cities of Goleta, Santa Barbara (including Montecito), and Carpinteria, we are  staging a Community Microgrid that will serve the community through future disasters and power outages.
Priority facilities with solar potential in Montecito, within the Goleta Load Pocket
This groundbreaking model for renewables-driven resilience will provide a blueprint that can be replicated in communities around the country.
To pave the way for Community Microgrids and to achieve our 25 x 25 vision, the  wholesale distributed generation (WDG) market segment must be unleashed. WDG is distributed generation, including commercial-scale solar, that interconnects to the distribution grid and serves local loads while avoiding any use of the transmission grid. The Clean Coalition uses a combination of two powerful tools to unleash the WDG market segment:  Solar Siting Surveys and innovative Feed-In Tariff (FIT) designs

Great examples of these tools have been developed in partnership with the City of San Diego as part of the  San Diego Solar Energy Innovation Network (SD SEIN) Initiative , which has the primary goal of sourcing 25% of the City's total electricity consumption from local renewables by 2035. Local renewables are defined as being interconnected on the distribution grid within the City boundaries.
A high-level map view from the San Diego Solar Siting Survey
The  San Diego Solar Siting Survey uncovered about 500 megawatts of large commercial-scale solar potential on built environments within the City — enough to fulfill the average power needs of about 500,000 homes during peak solar production hours. It is estimated that including small commercial and residential sites would expand the solar siting potential to multiple gigawatts. The San Diego FIT, currently under review by the City, features a  Market Responsive Pricing (MRP) mechanism to cost-effectively unleash WDG in San Diego and a  Dispatchability Adder to make renewable energy available whenever needed instead of only when the sun is shining or wind is blowing.
The Clean Coalition’s work on staging Community Microgrids and maximizing local renewables in these communities uncovers the legislative and regulatory hurdles impeding the progress of clean local energy and directly informs our policy initiatives. 

Our policy leadership continued in 2018 with  over 35 public filings in regulatory proceedings. This year saw major Clean Coalition-driven progress in resolving a wide range of issues at the California Public Utilities Commission (CPUC) to remove key barriers to WDG. Among these was the much-anticipated update to the utility Interconnection Capacity Analysis (ICA) maps, also known as  ICA 2.0 . This update almost suffered a significant setback when the major utilities withdrew access to their maps, citing confidentiality issues. Fortunately, intervention by the Clean Coalition and others resulted in  republication of the maps , which are key tools for renewable energy project developers and property owners.
ICA map example
2018 also brought significant advances on our  Transmission Access Charges (TAC) Campaign . After five years of relentless Clean Coalition pressure on the California Independent System Operator (CAISO), CAISO finally recommended that the CPUC review how to develop a fair and consistent transmission cost allocation system that credits load-serving entities for their WDG procurement, rather than allowing a massive market distortion to persist in investor-owned utility service territories that steals up to 4.6 cents per kWh of value from local renewables. In parallel, the Clean Coalition has designed its third  legislative vehicle to direct CAISO and the CPUC to fix the TAC distortion and address other key reforms that will remove barriers to WDG.
Thank you for continuing to support the Clean Coalition and our pursuit of making clean local energy accessible now. We wish you a happy holiday season and look forward to an even more successful 2019.

Sincerely,
Craig Lewis
Founder and Executive Director