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When your electric utility raises its rates, what recourse do you have? Sure, you can write letters, attend public hearings and hope the Wyoming Public Service Commission has your back. You can redouble your efforts to conserve and upgrade to more efficient appliances.
Opinion
There’s another way to express your concerns, though. If the power sold to you is too expensive, you can make your own. If your utility’s emissions haunt you, you can displace their power with carbon-free electricity from your roof or backyard.
Although small-scale distributed solar is a great way to counter rising utility costs, people in Wyoming have been slow to adopt it. As the owner of a solar contracting business for over 20 years, it has sometimes felt like selling sno-cones along Interstate 80 in January. After all, power here is cheap, and Wyoming does not have objectives or incentives for transitioning from fossil fuels to renewables like other states. Twenty-four years since Wyoming enacted statewide net metering, just one home in every 132 has its own solar or wind power, and among businesses, only a hundred or so do.
But opinions are changing. Our electricity — especially residential — is not cheap anymore, and climate concerns seem increasingly dire and close to home. For many people, and for a variety of motivations, it has become attractive to defect from an unresponsive utility system.
Which brings us to a hot debate in the 2025 General Session of the Wyoming Legislature. Two camps are seeking to influence Wyomingites’ prospects for home-brewing their power. The future of distributed generation (the ability of ratepayers to offset their electricity use by generating solar and wind power on their property) is on the line.
One bill, Senate File 111, “Net metering revisions,” intended to replace the retail rate credit now offered for month-to-month excess with a yet-to-be-known rate and to allow rural electric cooperatives to limit or opt out of net metering entirely. The bill failed to proceed, as had similar efforts in past years, but its proponents may still seek to limit the spread of customer generation.
The other, House Bill 183, “Net metering amendments,” offers to expand the reach of distributed generation, allowing non-residential ratepayers like businesses, ranches and schools to build larger systems consistent with their larger electric use. The measure cleared the House and has moved on to the Senate.
This debate is a crossroads moment for the future of rooftop solar in Wyoming. The effort to reign in net metering is being championed by utilities and utility advocates, while HB 183 is promoted by a grassroots coalition of ranchers, communities, small businesses and residents looking for solutions to rising energy costs and accountability in their utilities.
No business relishes competition. You need to trim prices, improve services and smile more. Rooftop solar is akin to competition to our regulated monopoly utilities — and many do not welcome it. In their 100 years of service to us, customers had no choice but to buy power from a single provider. Net metering changes this.
Electric utilities enable our quality of life. The U.S. electric grid is a marvel of engineering. We should be thankful for what this system has brought us and, at the same time, be willing to push our utilities to be the best versions of themselves. Rooftop solar is one of the few tools Wyomingites have at their disposal to do this.
If you’d like to see more of our rooftops generate electricity in Wyoming, I hope you’ll join me in supporting HB 183 and opposing efforts to restrain distributed generation.
The post Small-scale solar helps solve large-scale issues appeared first on WyoFile .