Green Electricity! - Utility style

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Green Electricity! - Utility style


You may now have the option of buying so-called "Green Electricity" from your electric provider, or from an alternative provider. If you are wondering how they do this, you are not alone.

Here is a rough description of how Green Electricity works. We will assume that the "green" resource is wind, because that is the most common, though it might come from solar, or in some cases hydro or landfill gas.

First, here is what it is not:

  • The electric company does not install install a wind turbine on your house.
  • They do not run special wires from a wind turbine somewhere else, to your house.
  • They don't generally make some special arrangement that at a given time, there is enough wind-based power generated to meet the instantaneous demands of the customers who sign up for green energy.

OK, then what DO they do?

The answer lies in some accounting, and a thing called a Renewable Energy Certificate (sometimes called Renewable Energy Credit (REC), a Green Tag, or a Tradeable Renewable Certificate(TRC)). The system also relies on some legislation that defines how RECs get issued and retired.

Many states these days have enacted what is called a "Renewable Portfolio Standard", which is law that requires that some amount of renewable energy be included in the total electricity mix. Rather than just require every producer to produce a particular amount of renewable energy, they have concocted a clever REC trading system that allows the renewable energy to be generated by anyone.

The general theme is this: A REC is a certification that a particular unit of electricity (say, a megawatt hour) was generated by some renewable energy producer, and it is given to the entity that generated the energy. For a unit of energy that was generated, there can be only one REC. In Texas, RECs are issued by ERCOT (Electric Reliability Council Of Texas), which oversees most electricity production and distribution in the state.

Entities that sell electricity to customers are required to turn in a certain number of RECs to ERCOT each year, this number being related to the amount of electricity that they sell. They may buy these, or they may generate the green energy themselves, and be granted the RECs. The requirement to turn in RECs causes the construction and operation of renewable energy facilities. The number of RECs that are required to be turned in is calculated based on the amount of renewable energy that legislators determine they want in the energy mix.

RECs are not the same as energy. When RECs are traded, all that is traded is the certification that some green energy was generated, not the energy itself. What gives RECs value is the fact that certain entities must turn some in each year.

Anyone can trade RECs. There are brokers who deal in them, and they can be bought and sold like any other commodity. Who might buy RECs?

  • A company that is required to turn some in, to satisfy the law.
  • A party who wishes to speculate on the possible appreciation of REC value.
  • A Green Electricity producer that does not have their own green generation capacity.
  • Parties wishing to increase the amount of renewable generation capacity for altruistic reasons.

Let's explore the second two of these.

Companies that sell green electricity may do the third, buying electricity wherever they can get it cheapest, to satisfy the needs of their customers. They can then buy enough RECs to cover the electricity that they have sold. An important point is that they are not allowed to sell these RECs. If they did, then the renewable energy corresponding to the REC would be claimed by more than one party.

An individual might choose to sign up with a green electricity provider. They might also choose to buy enough RECs to cover their electricity consumption, and then buy electricity from their old supplier. They might even choose to buy more RECs than are required to cover their own consumption.

The last two options share the fact that they do not resell the RECs that they buy. RECs that are not resold are unavailable to those parties that are required by law to buy them. The effect of this is that the amount of renewable energy capacity is increased beyond what the law mandates. Large groups of concerned citizens could increase the renewable energy generation base simply by buying and not reselling RECs. Or a concerned environmental organization might collect funds to buy and retire RECs.

While it is complex, the REC trading system has multiple benefits:

  • allows anyone to claim credits for their renewable energy generation,
  • satisfies the need to increase renewables as a percentage of the mix,
  • and allows well-meaning people or groups of people to increase the amount of renewable energy capacity beyond the legal requirement, by buying and retiring RECs.
  • Allows anyone to claim service of green electricity, whether or not they are served by a company that offers it.

A conscious electricity customer who wishes to use green electricity should not only check into the availability of "green" service, they should consider simply buying RECs in addition to a standard service, preferrably one with a low percentage of coal and nuclear in their fuel mix.


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last modified on Dec 31, 1969

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