Shumlin: Energy revolution to continue in 2017

Vermont Business Magazine Governor Peter Shumlin on Monday highlighted the success of an energy loan program that helps Vermonters retrofit their homes, reduce fossil fuel consumption, and save money. The Governor pointed to the program as an example of what is to come under a new law set to go into effect in January that will expand such energy and cost saving efforts. The Heat Saver Loan program was launched in 2014 to help homeowners make energy efficiency upgrades to their homes and pay for them with the resulting energy and cost savings, allowing homeowners to avoid up-front costs while achieving long-term energy and monetary savings.   

Over nearly two years, the program has generated 249 Heat Saver Loans valued at $2.85 million. The average loan is about $11,400, with each public dollar leveraging nearly $6 of private funds. Borrowers from 116 towns spread around the state accessed Heat Saver Loans to support thermal energy upgrades by 85 companies. The program is very successful in reaching low to middle income Vermonters – 80% percent of financing has gone to households making under 120 percent of median income. Weatherization tops the list of most frequently supported activities, followed by efficient boilers or furnaces and heat pumps.   

“This program has not only helped Vermonters save money, it has also helped reduce our overall fossil fuel consumption and put contractors around the state to work making Vermonters’ homes more comfortable and energy efficient,” Shumlin said. “The success of this program is a good example of what is to come for Vermont in 2017.”   

Name Average retail price (cents/kWh) Net summer capacity (MW) Net generation (MWh) Total retail sales (MWh)
Washington 7.13 30,949 116,334,363 92,140,777
West Virginia 7.65 16,276 81,059,577 32,696,106
Wyoming 7.76 8,458 49,696,183 17,134,075
Arkansas 7.9 14,754 61,592,137 47,080,301
Idaho 7.93 4,944 15,184,417 23,233,284
Louisiana 8.09 26,657 104,229,402 90,628,316
Iowa 8.15 16,507 56,853,282 47,201,853
Kentucky 8.15 20,878 90,896,435 78,838,924
Oklahoma 8.18 24,048 70,155,504 61,573,374
Utah 8.35 8,325 43,784,526 30,043,019
North Dakota 8.41 6,790 36,462,508 18,239,732
Montana 8.59 6,330 30,257,616 14,102,392
Oregon 8.68 15,884 60,119,907 47,334,953
Nebraska 8.84 8,732 39,431,291 30,222,168
Texas 8.94 112,914 437,629,668 389,669,820
South Dakota 9.05 3,948 10,995,240 12,354,726
Indiana 9.06 27,499 115,395,392 106,942,504
Missouri 9.11 21,790 87,834,468 83,878,397
Virginia 9.17 26,292 77,137,438 112,098,381
Alabama 9.27 31,953 149,340,447 90,493,727
North Carolina 9.33 30,498 128,143,588 133,132,776
Illinois 9.36 44,727 202,143,878 141,540,287
Tennessee 9.4 20,998 79,506,886 100,219,230
Minnesota 9.52 15,621 56,998,330 68,719,367
Mississippi 9.6 16,090 55,127,092 49,408,631
New Mexico 9.65 8,072 32,306,210 23,115,222
South Carolina 9.67 22,824 97,158,465 81,619,765
Nevada 9.73 10,485 36,000,537 35,075,606
Ohio 9.73 31,507 134,476,405 150,679,713
Georgia 10.03 38,250 125,837,224 135,789,932
Colorado 10.06 14,933 53,847,386 53,396,521
Kansas 10.16 14,227 49,728,363 40,561,606
Arizona 10.18 28,249 112,257,187 76,297,685
Pennsylvania 10.28 42,723 221,058,365 146,687,698
U.S. Total 10.44 1,068,422 4,093,606,005 3,764,700,267
Wisconsin 10.57 17,166 61,064,796 69,494,755
Florida 10.77 59,440 230,015,937 226,078,111
Michigan 11.03 30,435 106,816,991 103,314,098
Delaware 11.22 3,086 7,703,584 11,338,477
Maryland 12.1 12,264 37,833,652 61,683,869
District of Columbia 12.11 9 67,612 11,193,589
Maine 12.65 4,470 13,248,710 12,002,661
New Jersey 13.95 19,399 68,051,086 73,866,078
Vermont 14.57 650 7,031,394 5,569,861
California 15.15 74,646 198,807,622 262,584,786
New Hampshire 15.22 4,418 19,538,395 10,944,081
Massachusetts 15.35 13,128 31,118,591 54,469,292
Rhode Island 15.41 1,810 6,281,748 7,643,104
New York 16.25 40,404 137,122,202 147,371,913
Connecticut 17.05 8,832 33,676,980 29,354,460
Alaska 17.46 2,464 6,042,830 6,164,812
Hawaii 33.43 2,672 10,204,158 9,475,452

State Electricity Profiles, US Dept of Energy

Data for 2014. Lowest to highest rates by State  |  Release Date: March 24, 2016  |  Next Release: February 2017  

Starting in January, a law called for and signed by the Governor in 2015 (Act 56) will go into effect. That law will require Vermont’s largest utilities, which serve over 80 percent of Vermonters, to save fossil fuel use equivalent to two percent of their total sales through Energy Innovation Projects (EIP). Like the Heat Saver Loan program, EIPs will help Vermonters retrofit their homes with heat pumps, weatherization, and energy efficient appliances. These are improvements that will reduce Vermonters’ energy bills. In many cases, Vermonters will pay for them on their energy bills with the savings created by the efficiency work. As the improvements are paid off, Vermonters will see their energy costs and consumption continue to decline. 

“Utilities in Vermont have been revolutionizing the way they do business, and this law will help,” Gov. Shumlin said. “Utilities will now be in the business of helping customers use less energy, not more. We're going to make it easy to save energy and money - With no upfront costs and the work paid for on your energy bill with the savings created by the efficiency work, Vermonters will be able to save energy while watching their energy bills steadily decline. This law will put people to work doing efficiency work, help homeowners save on their energy bills, and help all of us reduce fossil fuel consumption.”

 Additionally, beginning January 1, 2017, Act 56 requires utilities to get 55 percent of their energy from renewable sources, up from around 45 percent today. In total, the law will build on the incredible progress Vermont has made on energy in the last six years, including: 

Vermont now has 11 times more solar panels and 22 times more wind energy generation than it did six years ago. 

Currently, over 17,000 Vermonters are employed by the clean energy economy. Over the past six years, clean energy workers have increasingly represented a growing and significant part of Vermont's economy. At a time when employers are adding jobs at a fast pace - employers have added nearly 19,000 jobs since January 2011 - the clean energy economy is growing at an even faster pace. Since 2013, the clean energy industry in Vermont has grown by nearly 20 percent. In 2014, 4.3 percent of Vermonters were employed in the clean energy industry. That rose to 4.8 percent in 2015 and is now at six percent, or about one in every 17 workers in the state. 

Vermonters electric bills are holding steady and are the second lowest in New England. Electric bills for about 75 percent of Vermonters have declined three of the last four yearsand Vermont has the lowest residential electric rates of any neighboring state including New York. Vermont has the lowest energy consumption in the nation.

Vermont Electricity Profile 2014

Table 1. 2014 Summary statistics (Vermont)  
Item Value Rank
Primary energy source   Nuclear
Net summer capacity (megawatts) 650 50
Electric utilities 337 44
IPP & CHP 313 49
Net generation (megawatthours) 7,031,394 48
Electric utilities 868,079 42
IPP & CHP 6,163,315 37
Emissions
Sulfur Dioxide (short tons) 71 50
Nitrogen Oxide (short tons) 737 50
Carbon Dioxide (thousand metric tons) 14 51
Sulfur Dioxide (lbs/MWh) 0.0 50
Nitrogen Oxide (lbs/MWh) 0.2 51
Carbon Dioxide (lbs/MWh) 4 51
Total retail sales (megawatthours) 5,569,861 51
Full service provider sales 5,569,861 48
Energy-only provider sales    
Direct use (megawatthours) 5,462 50
Average retail price (cents/kWh) 14.57 9
kWh = Kilowatthours.
Sources: U.S. Energy Information Administration, Form EIA-860, "Annual Electric Generator Report." U.S. Energy Information Administration, Form EIA-861,"Annual Electric Power Industry Report." U.S. Energy Information Administration, Form EIA-923, "Power Plant Operations Report" and predecessor forms.

Source: Governor 11.21.2016