This is your SolarWakeup for June 20th, 2018

I will be boarding my flight to Chicago shortly and want to thank the incredible SolarWakeup family for making this another fantastic event. After the day of conversations, we will be much more knowledgeable about the solar market in Illinois and how to make some money and create lots of change. See you there!

Getting Into Permitting With Abby Hopper. Frank ‘sits’ down with Abby Hopper of SEIA and discusses the idea of creating more efficiency in the permitting process. It’s great to see the leadership from SEIA have a focus on this issue which is not a defensive policy agenda item. Well worth the 3 minutes to read through and hope you tell SEIA that you appreciate their involvement on this.

A Downgrade For Utilities. Moody’s is raising a red flag. We’ve talked about how big utilities have gotten over the recent years and much of that is financed with access to really cheap debt through corporate bonds. Those bonds are really low coupons, many of the big IOUs have interest rates below 4% for long term capital mainly due to the security offered by the regulated service areas and the associated rate base. Those bonds are trading below par which is not a good thing in a capital market where rates are rising. Lay regulatory uncertainty over that risk and things could get ugly. Keep watching this space.

Mainstream Media Catches On. There is a risk to our short term energy policy surrounded by the starts and stops caused by some State legislatures. The risk is that investors lose confidence in companies and cause the liquidation to occur or sell the company prematurely to someone that sees a longer term vision. Of course, there are other aspects of this that differentiate the US and China but having a longer time horizon is definitely one of them. Now that solar panels are basically double the price than they could be, the US could do a reset and remove the tariffs and duties and double down on the energy transition.

Houston’s Solar Ecosystem. It’s interesting to speak with energy companies in the Houston ecosystem about solar and storage these days. Houston made its mark prospecting and playing the upside which is exactly the vision for solar in the next iteration. Bidding a $25/MWh solar PPA for 20 years is fine, it finances easily and requires tight operations. But there is no upside and little ability to play the spread in a sale. Solar with storage operated in a competitive market, that’s what I’m talking about and Houston gets that, check out the Chronicle’s coverage.

Opinion

Have a great day!

Yann