Rooftop Solar advocates, Duke Energy reach net metering agreement in North Carolina John Engel 11.30.2021 Share (A rooftop solar system.) Follow @EngelsAngle If approved by the NCUC, the new net metering tariffs would go into effect for customers submitting applications on or after Jan. 1, 2023. The policy would not be changed for 10 years. The agreement is similar to the deal reached between Duke Energy and solar advocates in South Carolina last year. “The agreement modernizes rooftop solar economics and unlocks benefits for all customers,” said Lon Huber, Duke Energy’s vice president of strategic solutions. “Net metering has been a contentious issue around the nation, but our stakeholder partners worked together to craft a fair solution that brings financial sustainability to rooftop solar in North Carolina.” Duke said the proposed net metering policy is designed to align with North Carolina's goals of reducing greenhouse gas emissions by 2030 and reaching net-zero emissions by 2050. The agreement includes (among other points): Monthly Minimum Bill$22 for DEC$28 for DEPMonthly Grid Access Fee of generators with capacity greater than 15 kW-dcDEC GAF: $2.05/kW - dc/monthDEP GAF: $1.50/kW - dc/monthNon-Bypassable Charges for costs related to DSM/EE, storm cost recovery, and cyber securityGrandfathers customers under previous net metering policy until Jan. 1, 2027 Related Posts Weather might damage solar panels more than our models predict EnergyHub lands grant to expand virtual power plants in California How low can you go? Basis Climate closes one of the smallest ITC deals on 1.2 MW Florida solar project Some solar suppliers increased prices for the first time in years amid AD/CVD petition, bifacial import duties