

You will be charged for all energy consumed that isn’t offset by customer-generated energy based on the applicable standard service (i.e.As of March 1, 2022, for billing months October through May, you will be compensated 4.462¢ per kWh for all exported kWh.As of March 1, 2022, for billing months June through September, you will be compensated 5.160¢ per kWh for all exported kWh.The compensation rate for exported customer-generated energy will be updated annually around March 1st:.Exported Customer-Generated Energy means the amount of customer-generated energy in excess of the customer’s on-site consumption that is exported to the power grid.Any customer-generated energy that is consumed on-site by the customer lowers that customer’s overall bills.For all terms and conditions, see Schedule 136.If you sell your home or building, then you will lose Transition Customer status and the buyer of the property will become the Transition Customer.You will no longer be considered a Transition Customer if you.The program will be approved by the Public Service Commission. The value of expiring credits will be applied to a program which has yet to be determined.residential net-metered customers stay in the residential rate class) You will remain within your otherwise applicable customer class through December 31, 2032.Residential (Schedules 1, 2, or 3): 9.2 ¢/kWh.Your compensation rate is based on your customer class or rate schedule and will be in effect until December 31, 2032.If you produce more than you consume, you will be given a ¢/kWh credit for that excess energy. If you consume more energy than you produce, you will pay for the actual amount of energy you consumed. Your generation and consumption will be measured at 15 minute increments.For all terms and conditions, see Schedule 135.You are required to participate in load research studies if selected to do so.If you sell your home or building, then you will lose the NEM customer status and the buyer of the property will become the NEM Customer.voluntarily change to another customer generation program.materially increase the size of your rooftop solar generation system, or.remove your approved rooftop solar generation system from service,.You will no longer be considered a NEM customer if you.You retain RECs and all non-energy attributes.The value of expiring credits will be applied to Rocky Mountain Power’s low income bill assistance program.Excess generation credits expire at the end of the annualized billing period (March for most customer classes and October for the irrigator class).Excess generation will be carried to the next month and credited against that month’s usage until the end of the annualized billing period. Your monthly generation and usage will be netted. You will receive the current NEM program structure until December 31, 2035.Your rate structure will only change when changes apply to the entire rate class, including the actual rates and surcharges that change with Public Service Commission approval.You will remain within your otherwise applicable customer class through December 31, 2035.Your energy generation and usage will be netted on a monthly basis. You will remain within the current NEM program until December 31, 2035.Reservations will be made on a first come, first served basis. You’ll need your account number to complete the reservation process. Reserve solar blocks below or by calling 1-84. Rocky Mountain Power does not profit from the Subscriber Solar program.

In some cases, customers may pay less in summer months if their usage exceeds 1,000 kwh per month.Cancelation fees are waived if you keep your subscription for at least three years. Once billing begins, customers have 30 days to cancel blocks to avoid a $50 cancellation fee per block. Billing for the program will begin in January 2017.If you move to another site in Utah served by Rocky Mountain Power, your solar blocks go with you. Keep your subscription for up to 20 years.Reserve blocks of 200-kilowatt-hours (kwh), which will offset usage on energy bills.Rocky Mountain Power has purchased the output of a 20-megawatt solar plant in Millard County, Utah.Giving customers another choice to use solar power even if they cannot afford private solar panels or do not want them on their home. Reservations are now available for Rocky Mountain’s Subscriber Solar program, which allows customers to subscribe to some or all of their energy from the power of the sun.
