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Public Service Commission To Consider Rooftop Solar Power Limits

Caption The PSC is discussing the current limits on rooftop solar panels for Georgia Power customers (file photo) Credit: File photo

The Georgia Public Service Commission is expected to discuss a key change to Georgia Power’s rooftop solar program Thursday.

Since 2019, Georgia Power customers with rooftop solar panels have been able to use 100% of the energy they generate to offset their energy costs. This saves solar users more money than the pre-2019 system, under which the utility bought solar power from individuals at a lower wholesale rate before selling conventional electric power to those customers at the higher retail rate.

But since the change, the number of customers in the rooftop solar program has more than doubled, according to the Southern Environmental Law Center.

The program is capped at 5,000 participants, or 32 megawatts of added capacity, whichever is met first. Applications and installations currently in progress could already meet that limit.

Environmental groups and solar advocates say expanding the program would help Georgians save on energy bills and access clean energy. 

Copyright 2021 Georgia Public Broadcasting

Emily Jones locally hosts Morning Edition and reports on all things coastal Georgia for GPB’s Savannah bureau. Before coming to GPB, she studied broadcast journalism at the Columbia Journalism School and urban history at Brown University. She’s worked for the Wall Street Journal Radio Network, WHYY in Philadelphia, and WBRU and RIPR in Providence. In addition to anchoring and reporting news at WBRU, Emily hosted the alt-rock station’s Retro Lunch as her DJ alter-ego, Domino.
Emily Jones
Emily Jones locally hosts Morning Edition and reports on all things coastal Georgia for GPB’s Savannah bureau. Before coming to GPB, she studied broadcast journalism at the Columbia Journalism School and urban history at Brown University. She’s worked for the Wall Street Journal Radio Network, WHYY in Philadelphia, and WBRU and RIPR in Providence.