Connecticut 2025 2025 Regular Session

Connecticut House Bill HB07087 Comm Sub / Analysis

Filed 04/07/2025

                     
Researcher: JS 	Page 1 	4/7/25 
 
 
 
OLR Bill Analysis 
sHB 7087  
 
AN ACT CONCERNING COMMUNITY SOLAR ENERGY 
GENERATING SYSTEMS.  
 
SUMMARY 
This bill requires the Public Utilities Regulatory Authority (PURA) to 
start a proceeding, by December 1, 2025, to establish a community solar 
energy generating system (“community solar project”) pilot program. 
Under the program, electric customers may subscribe to a community 
solar project and receive credits for a portion of the electricity the system 
generates. These credits are applied, through virtual net energy 
metering, toward the subscriber’s account or meter with an electric 
distribution company (EDC, i.e. Eversource and United Illuminating). 
The bill specifies that municipal electric utilities and cooperative utilities 
may participate in the program, but also limits subscriber participation 
to only EDC customers. 
The bill caps the pilot program at 600 megawatts, based on the 
nameplate capacity of all projects. It also, among other things, 
establishes processes for a community solar project to sell any excess 
credits it generates, requires PURA to adopt pilot program regulations 
(including a tariff structure that provides the retail rate for energy 
produced under a subscription), and allows a participating community 
solar project to continue operating as one even after the pilot program 
ends. (Presumably, the pilot program ends when subscriber 
organizations claim 600 megawatts in capacity.) 
Additionally, the bill establishes a working group to study the pilot 
program and make recommendations to PURA on whether a permanent 
program should be established.  
EFFECTIVE DATE: October 1, 2025  2025HB-07087-R000560-BA.DOCX 
 
Researcher: JS 	Page 2 	4/7/25 
 
COMMUNITY SOLAR PROJ ECT PILOT PROGRAM 
Community Solar Energy Generating Projects  
Under the bill, a community solar project is a solar photovoltaic 
system located in ISO–New England territory that may have a 
connected energy storage system. To qualify, a project must have at least 
two subscribers.   
Through virtual net energy metering, described below, subscribers 
receive credits on their bills (presumably electric bills) for a portion of 
the electricity the project generates. (The bill does not specify how EDCs 
recover their costs for the program.) 
A community solar project must have its own electric meter or be 
connected to two or more subscribers’ electric meters. To qualify, a 
project may not be owned by an EDC and no individual subscriber may 
constitute more than 60% of the total subscriptions.  
EDCs must use the energy a community solar project produces to 
offset the electricity it purchases from wholesale suppliers for its 
standard service.  
The bill specifies a subscriber organization (the community solar 
project’s owner or a collective group of subscribers) may contract with 
an outside party to finance, construct, own, or operate a community 
solar project. It also makes the subscriber organization responsible for 
paying any costs associated with small generator interconnection 
standards PURA may adopt or approve.  
Notification of Offers  
EDCs must place a message on customers’ electric bills letting them 
know how to subscribe to a community solar project and about offers 
on the Energy Conservation Management Board’s website. The bill 
allows subscriber organizations to submit information, for posting on 
this website, about potential offers and subscriptions it provides, 
including any that may be used in combination with other sources’ 
electric supply offers.    2025HB-07087-R000560-BA.DOCX 
 
Researcher: JS 	Page 3 	4/7/25 
 
Subscribers and Subscriptions  
Under the bill, subscribers must be EDC retail customers, but all rate 
classes are eligible to participate. Subscribers must have at least one 
individual meter or account to which the subscription can be applied. 
The bill specifies that electric customers receiving their electric supply 
through a standard service plan and those receiving it through a third-
party supplier may subscribe to the same community solar project.  
The bill requires the community solar project’s subscriber 
organization to allocate subscriptions among subscribers.  
Virtual Net Energy Metering and Subscriber Credits 
Under the bill, virtual net energy metering is measured over a 
subscriber’s billing period and is the difference between the number of 
kilowatt hours (kWh) that are supplied by the electric company and the 
number attributable to his or her subscription and fed back to the 
electric grid. It may also be measured using the difference in electricity 
value, rather than kWh. 
Billing. The subscriber organization calculates the credits owed each 
subscriber under the bill and the EDC must provide these credits 
according to a tariff structure in regulations PURA must adopt, as 
described below. The EDC must additionally offer subscriber 
organizations a “consolidated billing mechanism,” through which the 
EDC also bills subscribers for charges (or credits) related to the 
community solar project’s operations.  
Credit Cap. The bill limits the credits a subscriber may receive. A 
subscriber may not receive credit for virtual net excess generation 
(presumably, credit that exceeds usage) that exceeds 200% of the 
subscriber’s baseline annual usage (i.e. the total kWh used over the 12 
months before the most recent subscription began or, if the subscriber 
does not have this record, a 12-month estimate determined in a way that 
PURA approves).   
Sale of Excess and Unsubscribed Energy and Credits   
To EDCs. If the community solar project generates kilowatt hours  2025HB-07087-R000560-BA.DOCX 
 
Researcher: JS 	Page 4 	4/7/25 
 
that are not allocated to any subscriber (i.e. unsubscribed energy), the 
bill allows the subscriber organization to sell them to an EDC under the 
company’s processes for purchasing the output from qualifying 
facilities at the amount the energy would cost to procure on the electric 
market in the state.  
The subscriber organization may transfer any unsubscribed or 
overproduced energy credits to the Connecticut Green Bank as 
described below.  
By Connecticut Green Bank. The bill requires the Connecticut 
Green Bank, in consultation with the Department of Energy and 
Environmental Protection (DEEP), to establish and administer a 
community solar energy credit sale program. Under this program, 
subscriber organizations may transfer any unsubscribed or 
overproduced energy credits to the bank, which then owns them until 
it sells or disposes of them. Under the bill, the bank determines the 
purchase price of the credits it receives from the subscriber organization. 
(Presumably this is the price the Green Bank pays the subscriber 
organization for the credits.) After selling the credits, the bank must 
remit the proceeds back to the subscriber organization, less an 
administrative fee the bank sets in consultation with the commissioner.  
Pilot Program Termination  
The bill specifies that any community solar project or subscriber 
organization contracts executed during the pilot program are not 
affected by the program ending. Once the program ends, subscriber 
organizations may continue operating projects (including accepting 
subscriptions) that began under the pilot program. Similarly, EDCs 
must continue to facilitate these projects’ operations. They must do so 
in accordance with the program’s requirements and regulations PURA 
adopts.  
PURA Regulations  
The bill requires PURA to adopt regulations to implement the pilot 
program by February 1, 2026. These regulations must establish:  2025HB-07087-R000560-BA.DOCX 
 
Researcher: JS 	Page 5 	4/7/25 
 
1. consumer protections for electric customers; 
2. a tariff structure providing the electric retail rate for the kWh or 
value produced under a subscriber’s subscription;  
3. a calculation for virtual net energy metering; 
4. a protocol for EDCs, electric suppliers, and subscriber 
organizations to exchange information about, calculate, and 
provide monthly bill credits and any yearly net excess generation 
payments required under the bill (the bill does not define or 
otherwise reference yearly excess generation payments); and 
5. a protocol for subscriber organizations to coordinate with EDCs 
to interconnect their community solar projects with the 
distribution grid and start operating the projects.  
Once PURA adopts these regulations, subscriber organizations may 
petition EDCs to coordinate the community solar project’s 
interconnection and the start of its operations. Subscriber organizations 
must notify each EDC and electric supplier serving its subscribers about 
the regulations. 
PILOT PROGRAM WORKIN G GROUP  
The bill establishes a working group to study the pilot program’s 
value and costs and make recommendations to PURA on whether a 
permanent program should be established. The PURA chairperson must 
submit, by January 1, 2028, a report to the Energy and Technology 
Committee analyzing the working group’s findings. The working group 
terminates on this date or when it submits the report, whichever is later.  
Membership and Initial Meeting 
The working group members include the following or their 
designees: the (1) PURA chairperson, (2) DEEP commissioner, and (3) 
consumer counsel. The PURA chairperson may also appoint any other 
people she believes may help the working group achieve its purpose.  
Initial appointments must be made by July 1, 2026. The PURA  2025HB-07087-R000560-BA.DOCX 
 
Researcher: JS 	Page 6 	4/7/25 
 
chairperson (or, presumably, her designee if she appoints one in her 
stead) is the working group’s chairperson and must fill vacancies and 
schedule the first meeting, which must be held by October 1, 2026.  
Study Considerations  
When conducting the study, the working group must identify and 
examine:  
1. a framework to value the costs and benefits related to community 
solar and virtual net energy metering; 
2. the costs and benefits of community solar projects for 
participating subscribers and other ratepayers; 
3. credit mechanisms and operating structures allowing a project to 
minimize electric companies’, electric suppliers’, or subscriber 
organizations’ administrative costs; 
4. the benefits and costs, including the technical impact, of 
community solar projects and virtual net energy metering on 
EDCs’ distribution grids;  
5. issues, benefits, and concerns about participating in community 
solar programs and projects by electric companies (including 
investor-owned companies) and project owners and operators; 
6. the technical impact that virtual net energy metering and these 
projects have on the distribution system compared to the impact 
of traditional net energy metering;  
7. any impacts the program has on the standard service 
procurement process; 
8. community solar programs and cost-benefit studies in other 
states;  
9. whether and how community solar programs can reduce 
renewable portfolio standard compliance costs;  2025HB-07087-R000560-BA.DOCX 
 
Researcher: JS 	Page 7 	4/7/25 
 
10. how community solar projects can impact locational marginal 
prices in the state; 
11. the pilot program’s impact on energy costs, including their 
equitable allocation among ratepayers, and reliability; 
12. the pilot program’s progress in attracting low- and moderate-
income customers and how future project developers can 
increase their participation;  
13. whether community solar energy generating systems provide a 
net benefit overall in helping the state meet its distributed 
generation and renewable goals; and 
14. any other matters the working group considers relevant and 
appropriate.  
COMMITTEE ACTION 
Energy and Technology Committee 
Joint Favorable Substitute 
Yea 14 Nay 9 (03/18/2025)