Hartford Business Journal

September 20, 2021

Issue link: https://nebusinessmedia.uberflip.com/i/1410806

Contents of this Issue

Navigation

Page 21 of 35

22 HARTFORDBUSINESS.COM | SEPTEMBER 20, 2021 Sweeping power grid modernization plan hits 2-year mark, with small business interests a top priority Public Utilities Regulatory Authority Director of Utility Programs and Initiatives Joshua Ryor and PURA Chair Marissa Gillett at the agency's downtown New Britain office. HBJ PHOTO | STEVE LASCHEVER By Zachary Vasile zvasile@hartfordbusiness.com A lmost two years after unveiling a sweeping initiative aimed at improving and re- imagining Connecticut's power grid, regulatory officials say they've made considerable strides, pointing to new programs, increased engagement with ratepayers and an apparent new willingness to shake up the state's regulatory culture itself in the interest of spurring innovation. The Equitable Modern Grid Initiative, announced by the Public Utilities Regulatory Authority in Oct. 2019, encompasses 11 areas of focus, or "tracks," centering on some of the most contentious issues now facing Connecticut's utilities and their overseers, including energy reliability and affordability. To date, PURA has issued final decisions in three of those 11 tracks, including the establishment of a new energy storage program, and released straw proposals in an additional three. Other grid-modernization initiatives include investments in electric vehicles, the broader rollout of smart meters, and plans to study the state's regulatory environment, power purchase agreements and more resilient technological alternatives to traditional energy infrastructure, namely poles and wires. And regulators acknowledge this is just the beginning, as the programs launched from the grid modernization plan will continue for years to come. "I think that we've been making remarkable progress on the initiative, especially in light of the challenges that the state's seen in the past two years, between the pandemic and [Tropical Storm Isaias]," said PURA Chair Marissa P. Gillett. "There was certainly the chance that the progress could have been derailed and I think, if anything, we've pushed forward beyond the timelines that stakeholders expected." Throughout the process, PURA has paid particularly close attention to the interests and needs of small businesses, many of which have been hit hard by the COVID-19 pandemic. In June, the agency ordered Eversource Energy to develop an optional tariff rate for small business customers aimed at controlling their energy costs, a move applauded by the state's business interest groups, including the Connecticut Business & Industry Association. "We want to make sure affordability is front and center in every program that comes out of the grid [modernization] umbrella," Gillett said. "We have ratepayers who are stretched thin already. So we're making sure we're really thoughtful about the way we structure these programs so that we're not leaving out low- and moderate-income customers, that we're not leaving out small business customers, that we're not crowding out expansion opportunities for industrial customers." Joshua Ryor, director of the Office of Utility Programs and Initiatives at PURA, drew a direct link between affordability and the state's ability to attract new investment. As an example, Ryor said, when a low-income electricity customer can't afford their bill, and doesn't pay it, the utilities eventually recoup that cost from other users. It makes more sense to charge something a low- income customer can actually afford to prevent costs from being spread out over the broader customer base, he noted, and a similar principle applies to commercial growth. "We hear a lot about the Lamont administration trying to attract businesses to Connecticut," Ryor said. "We're trying to help there and saying, if you actually attract more [energy customers] to Connecticut, that means that those expenses are spread out over more people. So the question becomes — how do we address that in a thoughtful way that attracts businesses, but also leverages the benefits there to lower everybody else's rates." Companies looking to expand into or possibly relocate their operations to Connecticut also need to see that the state has a handle on broader affordability and reliability questions, Gillett said. "All that private investment needs those long-term price signals," she said. "The programs that we're setting up are making sure that folks aren't coming here, throwing down a one-time investment and going back to their home states." Cost concerns Connecticut has the highest energy rates in the continental U.S., a fact utility companies have partially attributed to the state's investment in green energy. And there are concerns that as the state pivots even further in the direction of renewable resources, prices will continue to go up. CBIA lobbyist John Blair said those worries extend to certain aspects of the state's grid modernization efforts. "We're supportive of all the ideas, but our main concern is the cost," Blair said. "Yes, this is good stuff for the state, but we have to do it in a way that's reasonable and where there's some reliability and predictability in terms of price." Continued high costs will only make it harder for small businesses to get back on a solid footing, he added. "It becomes difficult if we're going green at a price small businesses can't afford," Blair said. Gillett acknowledged there is some truth to the connection between high energy prices and the state's embrace of green energy goals and said one of the grid modernization

Articles in this issue

Links on this page

Archives of this issue

view archives of Hartford Business Journal - September 20, 2021