Gov. Chris Sununu vetoed a bill this week that would have dramatically expanded net metering in New Hampshire, pointing to a drafting error that he said went too far.
As originally introduced, Senate Bill 79 would have allowed industrial-scale businesses to install renewable net metering generators of up to five megawatts annually. But an unintentional legislative drafting error out of the Senate Energy and Natural Resources Committee entirely eliminated the current one-megawatt cap in place for all customer generators, residents included.
In his veto message Thursday, Sununu said SB 79 had โseveral problematic provisions,โ namely an amendment to the statutory definition of โcustomer generatorโ and removal of the one-megawatt net metering limit that applies to businesses and residents under current law.
โAlthough this may have been unintended by legislators, this change would completely upend the stateโs net metering structure and makes this bill unacceptable,โ Sununu wrote in his veto message.
The billโs prime sponsor, Sanbornton Republican Sen. Tim Lang, says he supports the governorโs veto after the โlegislative unforced errorโ changed the intent of his effort.
โThe point of the bill was to allow New Hampshire commercial and industrial businesses of all sizes to reduce operational expenses, help offset the high cost of electricity here in New Hampshire, and to keep the current New Hampshire economic boom ongoing,โ Lang said in an email. He plans to submit the bill again.
Sam Evans-Brown, executive director of Clean Energy New Hampshire, said his organization was expecting Sununuโs veto due to the drafting error.
โThe thing that is unfortunate is that none of us noticed it,โ he said. โI didnโt notice it, the solar advocates didnโt notice it. It was a fairly subtle change that youโd have to be very familiar with the statute to have noticed. Itโs unfortunate.โ
While the amendment in SB 79 was unintentional, clean energy advocates โ and a bipartisan group of lawmakers โ have been advocating to expand the consumer net metering cap to five megawatts anyway. During his time as governor, Sununu has vetoed bills to do so three times, in 2018, 2019, and 2020. In all three occasions, the Senate overrode the vetoes, but the vetoes were sustained in the House.
In his Thursday veto message, Sununu also doubled down on concerns heโs previously expressed about cost-shifting, specifically that SB 79 could benefit large businesses at the expense of ratepayers who canโt afford higher energy costs.
He noted an active adjudicative proceeding in front of the Public Utilities Commission that is considering changes to the current net metering tariff structure, which he said will better inform understanding of the extent that net metering shifts costs among ratepayers.
โAt that point, we may be able to feel much more confident that an expansion of net metering will not negatively impact our most vulnerable citizens,โ Sununu said.
A study commissioned by the state Department of Energy last year already gave an indication, estimating that under current projections through 2035, distributed energy โ mostly from rooftop solar panels โ will raise the average bill of other customers in New Hampshire by about 1 percent, but will bring system-wide financial benefits.
At the time, Consumer Advocate Don Kreis said the study undermined the common argument used by Sununu and other critics of โunreasonable cost-shifting.โ
Evans-Brown said it was unfortunate to see the governor โdoubling down with this rhetoric on cost-shiftingโ in his veto message, and he hopes Sununu will reconsider his stance when the bill comes back around again.
