PSC Order On Inflation Adjustment
PSC Order On Inflation Adjustment
PSC Order On Inflation Adjustment
INTRODUCTION....................................................1
BACKGROUND......................................................2
THE PETITIONS..................................................14
LEGAL AUTHORITY................................................30
DISCUSSION.....................................................31
CONCLUSION.....................................................54
APPENDIX
STATE OF NEW YORK
PUBLIC SERVICE COMMISSION
COMMISSIONERS PRESENT:
BY THE COMMISSION:
INTRODUCTION
On June 7, 2023, the Alliance for Clean Energy New
York (ACENY), Sunrise Wind LLC (Sunrise), and Empire Offshore
Wind LLC/Beacon Wind LLC (Empire/Beacon) filed separate
petitions (Petitions) collectively asking the Public Service
Commission (Commission) to authorize the New York State Energy
Research and Development Authority (NYSERDA) to amend the
existing contracts for: (1) Renewable Energy Certificates (RECs)
related to 86 contracts for on-land large scale renewable (LSR)
generation projects; and (2) Offshore Wind Renewable Energy
Certificates (ORECs) related to four offshore wind energy
generation projects (i.e., Sunrise Wind, Empire Wind 1 and 2,
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and Beacon Wind). The Petitions state that the combined effects
of delays in permitting decisions by federal and/or State
entities and of the COVID-19 pandemic have exposed the projects
to unprecedented global and regional supply chain bottlenecks,
high inflation, and increases in the cost of capital, driven by
rising interest rates. 1 Further, the Petitions identify impacts
associated with the war in Ukraine, including increased global
demand for renewable energy and resulting shortages and price
increases for key components and equipment. 2
At bottom, the amendments sought by the ACENY,
Sunrise, and Empire/Beacon Petitions would provide for an
administratively determined adjustment to the REC and OREC
prices established through NYSERDA’s competitive procurement
processes. In each case, the requested adjustment would
significantly raise the prices paid for the RECs and ORECs
represented by the 90 contracts. We deny the Petitions on the
grounds that the relief sought is inconsistent with Commission
policy favoring competition in generation procurement and for
the other reasons discussed below.
BACKGROUND
The Petitions collectively seek relief related to 86
LSR contracts ostensibly entered into by NYSERDA since 2016 and
4 offshore wind contracts entered into by NYSERDA in 2019 and
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6 RPS Order, pp. 3, 49, 60; see also Case 03-E-0188, supra,
Order Authorizing Fast Track Certification and Procurement
(issued December 16, 2004), p. 22.
7 Case 14-M-0101, Reforming the Energy Vision, Order Adopting
Regulatory Policy Framework and Implementation Plan (issued
February 26, 2015).
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option had previously been used in the RPS and CES programs and
was simplest but exposed developers to the entirety of energy
and capacity price risk over the life of the contracts. Under
this option developers would bid a fixed price along with their
proposal and the winning developer would sell its ORECs to
NYSERDA for that price. By contrast, the Index Price option
would require developers to bid a “strike price,” which would be
adjusted during the contract term by subtracting a reference
wholesale energy and capacity price to derive the monthly price
that NYSERDA would pay for ORECs. Ultimately, the Commission
adopted “a hybrid approach,” directing developers to submit both
Fixed prices and Index OREC strike prices in their bids to
NYSERDA, and authorizing NYSERDA to opt for one or the other. 17
The OSW Order aimed to balance several factors,
including concern for the costs and risks allocated to
ratepayers, the need to create sufficient financial certainty to
encourage entrants (and their financial backers) into a wholly
new industry, and the need to conclude auctions quickly to avoid
the cost-inflation that was expected to follow neighboring
jurisdictions’ entrance into the race to offshore wind industry
development in the Northeast and Mid-Atlantic. 18 By authorizing
NYSERDA to solicit both types of bids and then structure
contracts with winning bidders based on one or the other bid
mechanism, the Commission managed to gather as much information
as possible about the nascent marketplace for advantageous use
by the State. Consistent with the view expressed by the
Commission that “the financial risk involved in developing
offshore wind in its early stages indicates that some form of
adjustable future revenue streams may be appropriate,” NYSERDA
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opted to use the Index OREC structure for the 2.4 GW of projects
awarded contracts in the first offshore wind solicitation. 19
The Climate Leadership and Community Protection Act
The CLCPA, which became law in July 2019, amended the
PSL and expanded the State’s climate response efforts beyond the
CES program. The statute codified new decarbonization
requirements for various sectors of the economy and adopted more
ambitious renewable energy deployment targets. 20 In particular,
the CLCPA directed the Commission to establish a program by
June 30, 2021, to ensure that (1) in 2030, at least 70% of
electric load is served by renewable energy (70 by 2030 Target),
and (2) by 2040, “the statewide electrical demand system will be
zero emissions” (Zero Emissions by 2040 Target). 21 The CLCPA
also requires deployment of at least 9 GW of offshore wind
generating capacity by 2035. 22
In response to these aspects of the CLCPA, on
October 15, 2020, the Commission issued the CES Modification
Order to align the existing CES with the new CLCPA targets. 23
Among other things, the CES Modification Order directed NYSERDA
to increase the rate of OREC solicitations, 24 anticipating that
5.8 GW of offshore wind capacity would be in service by 2030 and
19 Id., p. 38.
20 L. 2019, ch. 106 (codified, in part, in PSL §66-p), §4.
21 PSL §66-p(2).
22 PSL §66-p(5).
23 Case 15-E-0302, Order Adopting Modifications to the Clean
Energy Standard (issued October 15, 2020) (CES Modification
Order).
24 Id., p. 45 (referencing PSL §66-p(5)).
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44 https://www.nyserda.ny.gov/All-Programs/Offshore-Wind/Focus-
Areas/Offshore-Wind-Solicitations/2020-Solicitation (2020 OSW
Solicitation).
45 Id.
46 See id. (Contract(s) Executed).
47 See NYSERDA Comments, p. 18, Table 5.
48 Levelized over the 25-year contract term, the Year 1 strike
price is $99.08/MWh with a 2% annual escalator.
49 Id., pp. 32-33.
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THE PETITIONS
As noted above, the Petitions request orders from the
Commission authorizing NYSERDA to adjust the contracts for each
of the projects at issue through different adjustment
mechanisms, specific to each Petition.
The ACENY Petition
The ACENY Petition requests an order from the
Commission authorizing NYSERDA to incorporate an adjustment
mechanism into 83 existing CES Tier 1 contracts awarded between
2017-2021, and 3 RPS contracts awarded in 2016. The ACENY
Petition explains the general timeframe associated with
developing the most recently built LSR projects in New York. It
notes that, in addition to securing a REC award via a NYSERDA
Tier 1 solicitation, a renewables project needs to obtain
“permits and interconnection authorization ... followed by
financing and construction arrangements, including the execution
of contracts, to complete project development.” 51 The ACENY
Petition states that, to date, “the small subset of Awarded
50 Id., p. 33.
51 ACENY Petition, pp. 2-3.
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52 Id., p. 3.
53 Id.
54 Id., pp. 3-4.
55 Id.
56 Id., p. 4.
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61 ACENY Petition, p. 5.
62 Id., p. 27.
63 Id; see also id., p. 25 (“it is reasonable to presume Under
Development Projects are no longer economically viable under
their existing contract terms” and thus “cannot be built”).
64 Id., p. 21.
65 PA Affidavit, ¶64.
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68 Id., ¶65.
69 Id.
70 Id., ¶¶78-81, Table 17.
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Sunrise Wind
Sunrise Wind is a 924 MW project that would be located
30 miles east of Long Island. It is being developed by Sunrise,
a joint venture of Orsted and Eversource. NYSERDA received the
bid for that project in response to its November 2018
solicitation and contracted with Sunrise in October 2019 for a
strike price of $110.37 over the 25-year life of the OREC
Agreement. Because the contract is for Index ORECs, a reference
energy price and reference capacity price would be subtracted
from that strike price each month to arrive at the amount that
would be paid for the environmental attributes associated with
each MWh from the project. Sunrise’s petition (the Sunrise
Petition) asks the Commission to direct NYSERDA to amend the
project’s OREC Agreement by adding to it the inflation and
interconnection adjustment mechanisms incorporated into NY3,
NYSERDA’s third offshore wind solicitation.
The Sunrise Petition describes how a series of
unanticipated and extraordinary economic events have given rise
71 Id., ¶81.
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83 Id., p. 46.
84 Beacon Wind is slated to be the first phase of two, but as the
second phase has not been awarded an OREC Agreement, this
order will refer to the first phase as simply Beacon Wind.
85 Empire/Beacon Petition, p. 5 (citing Case 21-T-0366,
Application of Empire Offshore Wind LLC for a Certificate of
Envtl. Compatibility and Pub. Need for the Constr. of
Approximately 17.5 Miles of Transmission Lines from the
Boundary of N.Y.S. Territorial Waters to a Point of
Interconnection in Brooklyn, Kings Cnty.).
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94 Id., p. 9.
95 Id., pp. 11-15, 17-21.
96 Id., pp. 21-24, and App. C (Wood Mackenzie report).
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97 Id., p. 27.
98 Id.
99 Id.
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LEGAL AUTHORITY
The Commission has significant authority to ensure
that electricity supplied to electric ratepayers is safe and
reliable and provided in a way that both is just and reasonable
and appropriately addresses environmental externalities. The
most important of these core principles is incorporated into PSL
§65(1), which charges the Commission with the obligation to
ensure that “every electric corporation and every municipality
shall furnish and provide such service, instrumentalities and
facilities as shall be safe and adequate and in all respects
just and reasonable.” Similarly broad is PSL §5(1), which
provides that the Commission’s “jurisdiction, supervision,
powers and duties” extends to the “manufacture, conveying,
transportation, sale or distribution of ... electricity.”
Several provisions of the PSL require the Commission
to consider the public health and environmental impacts of the
resources that provide energy supply to customers. For example,
PSL §5(2) requires the Commission to “encourage all persons and
corporations subject to its jurisdiction to formulate and
carryout long-range programs, individually or cooperatively, for
the performance of their public service responsibilities with
economy, efficiency, and care for the public safety, the
preservation of environmental values and the conservation of
natural resources.” PSL §66(2) provides that the Commission
shall “examine or investigate the methods employed by []
persons, corporations and municipalities in manufacturing,
distributing and supplying ... electricity ... and have power to
order such reasonable improvements as well as promote the public
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DISCUSSION
The basic question in this case is the same one that
guides most Commission decisions: whether granting the requested
relief would support the provision of safe and adequate service
105 See Int’l R.R. Co. v. Pub. Serv. Comm’n, 264 A.D. 506, 510
(1942).
106 See Consolidated Edison Co. v. Pub. Serv. Comm’n, 47 N.Y.2d 94
(1979) (describing the broad delegation of authority to the
Commission and the legislature’s unqualified recognition of
the importance of environmental stewardship and resource
conservation), reversed on other grounds, 447 U.S. 530 (1980).
107 PSL §66(5).
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108 See also Matter of Energy Ass'n v. Pub. Serv. Comm’n, 169
Misc.2d 924, 929 (N.Y. Sup. Ct. 1996) (“Section 5(2) ...
transform[ed] the traditional role of the Commission from that
of an instrument for a simple case-by-case consideration of
rates requested by utilities to one charged with the duty of
long-range planning for the public benefit.”).
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dealing with, among other things, energy conservation, 109 the RPS
program, 110 and adoption of the REV program. 111
The second shift occurred in a series of steps taken
by the Commission beginning in 1996, 112 which effectuated a
departure from the State’s longstanding model of vertically
integrated utilities and cost-of-service regulation to a
restructured wholesale electric model that incorporates
competition into the pursuit of compliance with PSL §65(1). The
Commission did this through a suite of goals, including lower
rates, greater customer choice, continued reliability of
service, and addressing risks of energy sector market power. 113
In making this shift, the Commission recognized that a mechanism
would be necessary to fund “public policy initiatives that are
not expected to be adequately addressed by competitive markets,”
and established the System Benefits Charge to meet that need. 114
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115 FERC Order 888, 75 FERC ¶61,080 (April 24, 1996), pp. 60, 279-
86.
116 Competitive Opportunities Order, pp. 64-65, 96-100.
117 Id., pp. 54-55.
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Index OREC bid. 133 Also in 2020, the Commission directed NYSERDA
to include an additional option for bidders to offer an Index
REC price in future Tier 1 solicitations, beginning with the
2020 solicitation. 134 Finally, the Commission authorized NYSERDA
to offer Tier 1 projects the option to convert their Fixed-Price
REC to an Index REC price approach based on NYSERDA’s
“compelling showing that substantial cost savings will likely
result if the Index REC is introduced as an option for the 65
eligible renewable energy projects now under Fixed-Price REC
contracts.” 135
The competitive approach to incentivizing the
development of renewable energy is also embodied in the
contracts executed by the Petitioners and NYSERDA, and the
solicitations to which the Petitioners initially responded with
bids, in conformance with the Commission orders discussed above.
These sources of authority do not permit NYSERDA to amend the
material pricing terms of the competitively awarded contracts at
issue unilaterally; doing so would mean altering one of the
fundamental terms of procurement set forth in Commission orders,
which authority is reserved to the Commission. In this regard,
NYSERDA’s guidelines issued with respect to its 2020 offshore
wind solicitation specified that “[c]ompetitive procurement
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rules and the OSW Order limit NYSERDA’s ability to alter the
terms of the Agreement.” 136
In sum, for the past 19 years, competition has been a
cornerstone of Commission policy for controlling the costs
associated with supporting renewable generation, resting on the
premise that bringing competition to bear on investment,
procurement, and operational decisions in the power sector will
yield cost-effective outcomes for ratepayers, in part by
allocating risk to generation project developers and operators.
The Petitions seek relief inconsistent with the Commission’s
longstanding approach, insofar as they propose to arrive at a
strike price through an administrative determination rather than
a competitive bidding process. Several commenters, including
Multiple Intervenors, the Municipal Electric Utilities
Association of New York State, the Joint Utilities, and Nucor
Steel Auburn, Inc., highlight this point.
We recognize that PSL §66-p(2) adds the pursuit of the
70 by 2030 and Zero Emissions by 2040 Targets to the
Commission’s obligations but do not read the provisions of the
more recent statute as superseding the Commission’s longstanding
mandate to ensure that rates are just and reasonable. There is
no indication in the statutory language or history that the
legislature intended such a result, which could have the
undesirable effect of driving ratepayer costs so high as to put
the entire program at risk. To the contrary, the legislature
provided the Commission with significant discretion under PSL
§66-p(2) regarding how to establish the program to implement the
70 by 2030 and Zero Emissions by 2040 Targets by authorizing the
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% Increase Total Bill 2.3% – 4.4% 2.5% – 4.8% 3.0% – 6.1% 3.7% - 6.8%
Highest Cost Scenario
Net Impact of Granting Relief as Requested
Statewide - $1.456B/year $0.01047/kWh
$/month Increase $6.28 $131.98 $7,541.91 $13,575.43
% Increase Total Bill 3.5% – 6.7% 3.8% – 7.4% 4.6% – 9.3% 5.6% - 10.5%
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150 The plain language of the CLCPA provides until the end of 2030
to achieve the 70 by 2030 Target. See PSL §66-p(2)(a)
(Commission shall establish program to require ”a minimum of
seventy percent of the state wide electric generation secured
by jurisdictional load serving entities to meet the electrical
energy requirements of all end-use customers in New York state
in two thousand thirty shall be generated by renewable energy
systems”) (emphasis added).
151 NRDC’s Comments, p. 4.
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deficient for all years 2025 through 2033 when considering the
additional large loads.” 152
We take the findings of the NYISO’s STAR Report
seriously and understand that reliability margins have been
eroding as older, less efficient generators withdraw from the
market and more stringent environmental standards are enacted.
This trend poses a number of important challenges. However, the
report does not justify a decision to authorize contract relief
for the projects that are the subject of the Petitions. Rather,
the NYISO’s forecast suggests that only the CHPE project is on a
course of development that can address the near-term reliability
need. 153 While additional renewable generation will have a role
in addressing future reliability concerns, none of the projects
at issue here would be in-service in time to displace CHPE and
its contribution to reliability margins. In the meantime, the
Commission will remain vigilant in ensuring system reliability.
Finally, we address the concerns expressed in several
of the public comments that providing relief to ensure the
completion of the projects subject to the Petitions is essential
to achieve the CLCPA’s 70 by 2030 and Zero Emissions by 2040
Targets. For example, Sierra Club and Environmental Advocates
NY (EANY) filed a joint comment, stating that the Commission’s
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CONCLUSION
The Commission finds that competitive solicitations
remain the best mechanism by which to meet its obligation to
establish just and reasonable rates for renewable generation
subsidies under PSL §65(1) on the path to meeting the renewable
energy targets of the CLCPA. The relief sought here is not
consistent with our well-established competitive paradigm for
selecting cost-effective and viable renewable projects. For
this reason and those discussed in the body of this Order, the
Commission denies the Petitions.
By the Commission,
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that prices could increase but does not believe that prices
would increase by as much as is requested in the ACENY Petition.
AES characterizes ACENY’s premise that New York cannot
meet the goals of the CLCPA without an inflation adjustment as
“demonstrably false.” AES states that prior Tier 1 solicitations
only required minimal project de-risking due to lower minimum
threshold requirements and that as a result, “projects were bid
at strike prices lower than the cost to build in New York” and
that these non-viable projects have “have been continuing to
extend their contracts and have not suffered any significant
financial penalties” due to NYSERDA’s relatively low contract
security amounts. AES further describes regulatory barriers
related to permitting and interconnection, and a shortage of EPC
firms able to build at scale, as sources of project development
delays.
AES presents a scenario assuming that “projects that
are not ready-to-build before 2026 would have enough time to
rebid with pricing that reflects the true costs to build their
projects in a future NYSERDA solicitation” and states that under
this scenario, contracted non-viable projects could be canceled
and New York could still meet the 2030 CLCPA goal. AES further
characterizes that based on publicly available information and
given the IRA tax credits for energy communities and domestic
content, 12 of the 40 large projects included in the ACENY
Petition can move forward without the inflation adjustment and
build pre-2026. AES estimates that “the total costs required to
support the adjustment mechanism are understated in the Petition
by several billion dollars” and states that the “adjustment
mechanism does not provide certainty that these projects would
be built even after receiving an adjustment nor does it confirm
when they would be completed.” AES states that the Phase 2
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the wake of the Covid-19 pandemic and the war in Ukraine,” and,
absent an inflation adjustment, “we risk losing the jobs,
opportunities, and economic activity they stand to deliver.”
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of projects that have had contracts for several years and not
made progress should not be rewarded with additional financial
support. The City of New York proposes that a cap should be set
on the relief received for any individual Tier 1 project to
align the 20% planned attrition rate.
For Empire/Beacon and Sunrise, the City of New York
proposes that adjustments for the offshore wind projects should
be limited to encompass only those elements for which the
Commission finds sufficient justification. The City of New York
notes that Empire/Beacon and Sunrise are not offering any
incremental or supplemental consideration in exchange for the
requested relief. The City of New York proposes that “any
upward adjustment mechanism should be paired with a claw back or
downward adjustment provision that provides for sharing of
savings should project economics change over the course of the
term of the contracts.” The City of New York recommends an
80/20 (ratepayer/developer) sharing ratio. Similar to Tier 1,
the City of New York proposes that the offshore wind projects be
required to file financial reports after completion, and that
relief should be limited such that there are no increases in
profits. The City of New York takes the position that the
extension of the contract term for Empire 1, the addition of an
annual escalator to Empire 2 and Beacon, and the interconnection
costs for all Empire/Beacon projects should be denied.
For CPNY, the City of New York takes the position that
generation component of the project should be granted the same
relief as the Tier 1 projects. The City of New York “urges the
Commission to avoid an outcome in this matter that undermines
Tier 4 or otherwise disincentivizes developers from committing
their upstate wind and solar projects to be part of CPNY’s
Selected Project.” The City of New York proposes that the
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Joint Utilities
The Joint Utilities oppose the Petitions pending
before the Commission on the grounds that Empire/Beacon,
Sunrise, ACENY and CPNY are “sophisticated market participants
with extensive experience in the development of renewable
generation facilities and should have factored economic risks
into their bid prices in the event of unforeseen circumstances.”
The Joint Utilities thus recommend that the Commission deny the
relief sought in the Petitions and direct NYSERDA to conduct new
procurements. The Joint Utilities note that “allowing post-
solicitation changes to contract prices gives an unfair
advantage to the winning bidder(s) that did not adequately
factor in economic and market risks” and that granting the
requested relief “would cause significant cost increases for
customers and would set a damaging precedent for all future
NYSERDA procurements.” The Joint Utilities note that approval of
the Petitions “would fundamentally change features of the CES
procurements from a market-based pricing model to more of a
cost-of-service based model without including the protections
inherent in cost-of-service regulation.”
The Joint Utilities state that conducting new
procurements to replace any projects that cancel their contracts
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of the lowest bids that previously were rejected for being too
costly.”
If the Commission does grant relief, MI/MEUA state
that a comprehensive and transparent investigation should be
conducted of each project requesting increased compensation.
With respect to Tier 4, MI/MEUA oppose the CPNY
Petition’s request to increase the price of CPNY’s generation
component for similar reasons as those expressed for Tier 1.
MI/MEUA recommend instead that additional competitive
solicitations should be authorized to replace developers who are
unable or unwilling to perform under their existing contracts.
In supplemental comments regarding Tier 1 and offshore
wind, MI/MEUA provide an estimated increase of incremental costs
requested by ACENY, Empire/Beacon and Sunrise to $48.39 billion
based on NYSERDA’s comments. MI/MEUA also estimate the
incremental cost of the alternative options proposed by NYSERDA
at $20.8 to $26.0 billion. MI/MEUA reaffirm the position that
additional transparency is required regarding the requested
relief and the developers receiving it. MI/MEUA also state that
any Commission Order granting relief should include a complete
rate impact analysis. MI/MEUA support the additional contract
terms and conditions recommended by NYSRDA, Joint Utilities, AES
and Rise Light & Power, in the event that relief is granted.
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Town of Hounsfield
The Town of Hounsfield supports granting the relief
requested in the ACENY Petition to Boralex, with specific
reference to the Greens Corners Solar project, based on
Boralex’s reported “commitment to the community, willingness to
adjust the project based on specific community concerns, and
overall corporate stewardship” and “commitment to hiring local
companies and workers for the construction phase of the
project.” Absent the requested relief, the Town of Hounsfield is
concerned that “New York risks good developers like Boralex
moving to other states,” which would mean losing “millions of
dollars in PILOT payments and Host Community Benefits across the
life of their projects” and “tens of millions of additional
economic stimuli throughout construction and operation of Greens
Corners Solar and their full portfolio of New York projects.”
The Town of Hounsfield states that it is crucial to grant relief
to Boralex in order to “ensure the state meets its aggressive
climate mandates on time” and to avoid “increased costs beyond
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Comments of Individuals
In addition to the comments summarized above, hundreds
of more comments were submitted and considered by the Commission
and the Department. Around 1,100 individuals submitted public
comments electronically on the Department of Public Service’s
(DPS) Document and Matter Management System (DMM), and/or they
were emailed to the DPS Secretary, under Case No. 15-E-0302 and
Case No. 18-E-0071, during the public comment period for the
Petitions. A majority of the individual commenters,
approximately 950 out of 1,100, support the ACENY Petition.
Approximately 125 additional commenters support the CPNY
Petition. Approximately 15 of the 1,100 individual commenters
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