Bill to allow community solar projects clears Senate
March 4, 2025
The Senate late last week passed a proposal that would establish a legal framework for community solar power projects.
Senate Bill 188âs sponsor is Sen. Chris Pope, a Democrat from Bozeman who unsuccessfully introduced similar legislation in 2023. During a Jan. 30 hearing before the Senate Energy, Technology and Federal Relations Committee, Pope said the bill would expand access to locally generated, emissions-free power, which would decrease participantsâ utility bills, support a growing but underdeveloped industry and improve the gridâs resilience to extreme weather events.
Pope said 44 states have similar programs and Montana is going to need additional electricity generation to meet increasing power demand, an energy dynamic thatâs accelerated by the rise of artificial intelligence and other electricity-intensive enterprises.
More than 20 peopletestified in favor of SB 188, arguing that itâs a âconsumer choiceâ initiative for which there is plenty of demand â and plenty of economic development opportunity. Representatives from NorthWestern Energy and Montana-Dakota Utilities, Montanaâs two investor-owned utilities, were the measureâs sole opponents when the bill was heard in committee. They argued that there are cost-shift concerns associated with SB 188 and that the paperwork required to implement the program would be a burden.
If it passes the Legislature, SB 188 would allow a solar developer to build a solar array between 50 kilowatts and five megawatts and sell shares of the arrayâs generation to subscribers, who would use the power produced to offset their monthly power bills.Â
Pope said he anticipates a subscription-based solar program would appeal to individuals interested in lowering their power bills, environmentally conscious businesses and nonprofits lacking the right logistical or financial conditions to install their own solar panels, and property owners looking to more fully utilize sun-soaked rooftops, fields and parking areas.
SB 188 would require the Montana Public Service Commission, the elected utility board charged with balancing the financial health of investor-owned utilities with the interest of those utilitiesâ customers, to come up with a framework for pricing the electricity generated. An investor-owned utilityâs transmission, distributionand administration expenses associated with launching and maintaining such a program would be taken into account when developing a pricing framework, and utility customers with an existing net-metering set-up would be prohibited from participating in a community solar project.
Pope told his colleagues on the Senate energy committee that SB 188 would âunlock significant private investment for made-in-Montana energy that will be generated within our stateâs borders.â
âItâs enabling legislation,â he continued. âIt does not require state funding, doesnât require anyone or anything to buy anything, or spend anything or do anything unless they find it in their interest.â
RELATED
New agreement aims to add renewable power to Montanaâs grid
Bozeman and Missoula have voted to approve the Green Power Program, which, pending approval by the state Public Service Commission, will add a new renewable energy source for local governments, businesses and eventually residents to tap into.
Nine rural electricity cooperatives have established similar programs âand see high demand for subscriptions,â according to Scott Sweeney, a Lewistown-area rancher who formerly served as the general manager for the Fergus County Electric Co-op.Â
During the SB 188 hearing, Sweeney added that MDU and NorthWestern Energy both raised their electricity rates recently â MDU by 9% and NorthWestern Energy by 28% â and are working on another round of proposed rate increases. Nearly half of the stateâs residents are facing additional rate increases that community solar can help offset, he said.
Justin Pearce with A-Team Roofing and Solar of Billings made an economic development pitch to committee members. Twenty-seven people are on A-Teamâs payroll and the company hopes to bring that number up to 50 by the end of the year to capitalize on the 285 âsun daysâ southeastern Montana has each year.Â
âWhat we need from you all at the Montana Legislature is to allow us to enter into the [community solar] market. Right now, most of Montana is locked out of this type of energy generation. If government can get out of the way ⊠Montana businesses like ourselves can diversify and expand into subscription-based solar.â
Nick Fitzmaurice, Montana Environmental Information Centerâs energy transition engineer, echoed Pearceâs request, arguing that lawmakers need to act to allow residents to tap into Montanaâs âtremendous solar resourceâ and give Montanans reprieve from some of the highest electricity bills in the region.
Other proponents include the Montana Renewable Energy Association, Montana Farmers Union, Northern Plains Resource Council, Renewable Northwest, NW Energy Coalition, the Blackfeet Nation, the Fort Belknap Indian Community and the Chippewa Cree Tribe of Rocky Boy.
Alan Olson, NorthWestern Energyâs director of government affairs, argued that the company is ânot the least little bitâ opposed to renewable energy, but doesnât believe SB 188 is the right way to go about it. NorthWestern Energy would rather see such interest and demand go through the qualifying facility process, he said, referencing a federally created and Montana Public Service Commission-regulated process that allows smaller power generators to tie into transmission infrastructure owned by a monopoly utility.
RELATED
Four things to know about NorthWestern Energyâs newest rate hike request
Less than a year after levying a 28% increase on residential electricity customers, NorthWestern Energy is looking to recover an additional $193 million annually from its electricity and natural gas customers. Hereâs what customers should know about the rate hike request thatâs currently before Montanaâs Public Service Commission.
Administering the program creates a paperwork burden that would generate costs that would be passed down to other ratepayers, Olson argued.
During his closing remarks on the measure, Pope responded to NorthWesternâs concerns, arguing that heâs worked hard to ensure there are no cost shifts associated with SB 188. Montanaâs lackluster track record bringing new qualifying facilities into the fold suggests to him that expanding solar power in Montana by going through that process âis not a path forward.â Qualifying facility projects frequently face significant legal and financial headwinds posed by the investor-owned utilities that own and operate much of the stateâs grid.
After passing the Senate energy committee with a lone Republican, Senate President Matt Regier, R-Kalispell, in opposition, the measure passed out of the Senate on Feb. 28 with broad bipartisan support.Â
Thirty-eight senators supported the measure on its third reading vote. Ten Republicans and one Democrat, Sen. Laura Smith of Helena, opposed SB 188. It will now receive a hearing in the House energy committee on an as-yet undecided date.
In other solar energy news, the House energy committee on Monday afternoon held a hearing on a proposal by Rep. Jamie Isaly, D-Livingston, to increase the net-metering cap from 50 kilowatt hours to 100 kilowatt hours. Shortly thereafter, the committee voted to table House Bill 811, which sought to allow entities with sizable energy bills â schools, libraries, larger businesses, etc. â to use solar panels to offset a greater portion of their monthly electricity costs.Â
LATEST STORIES
Medical malpractice bills designed to protect hospitals, providers and insurance companies advance in a âdistractibleâ Legislature
Several changes to Montanaâs medical malpractice landscape backed by the health care industry are moving easily through the state Legislature, including measures to limit how jurors can assess damages in malpractice cases and close avenues for reporting license complaints to professional oversight boards.
Court generally upholds pro-construction housing laws â but nixes NIMBY-focused public comment limits
A district court judge ruled against most of the claims made by a homeowners group that sued to challenge four pro-construction housing laws passed by the 2023 Legislature. But he also concluded that provisions of one law intended to prevent not-in-my-backyard-style activism from derailing development proposals violate the Montana Constitutionâs right of participation.
The Session: Week 8 | Blasted bills, and the property tax debate continues
âThe 69th Legislature is starting week eight of the session. Factions in the state Senate are cleaving further apart and impacting the chamberâs work. Debates over education policy are heating up. This is The Session, a look at the policy and politics inside the Montana State House.
Â
Search
RECENT PRESS RELEASES
Related Post