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Heinrich, Democratic Colleagues Commend FERC Decision To Reject Petition Aimed At Upending States’ Net Metering Programs

WASHINGTON – Following calls from U.S. Senators Martin Heinrich (D-N.M.), Maggie Hassan (D-N.H.), Sheldon Whitehouse (D-R.I.), and 21 of their colleagues, the Federal Energy Regulatory Commission (FERC) voted unanimously to reject a petition by the New England Ratepayers Association (NERA) that would have upended states’ net metering programs – including New Mexico.

Net metering allows consumers and businesses who generate some or all of their own electricity, particularly through wind and solar energy technology, to be compensated for the excess energy that they provide to the electric grid and other customers.

“The Federal Energy Regulatory Commission made the right call by rejecting this senseless petition and preserving states’ ability to run their own net metering programs,” said the senators. “The petition, pushed by a shadowy group, could have undone 45 existing state policies and raised energy costs, undermining the renewable energy industry at a time when our economy is already so fragile amid the COVID-19 pandemic.”

In May, Senators Heinrich, Hassan, and Whitehouse led their colleagues in a letter urging FERC to preserve states’ net metering laws by rejecting NERA’s petition, which would have overturned long-held precedent and given the federal government decision-making power that has long belonged to the states. In their letter, the Senators also highlighted how little public information is available about NERA and raised concerns that their interests do not align with that of ratepayers.