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A local, not-for-profit electricity provider

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Presentation on theme: "A local, not-for-profit electricity provider"— Presentation transcript:

1 A local, not-for-profit electricity provider
MCE A local, not-for-profit electricity provider Photo: Cooley Quarry groundbreaking

2 How Electric Service Works
MCE Generation PG&E Delivery Same Service Slide topic: how it works All electric customers’ bill include generation and delivery services. MCE takes over PG&E’s role of electric generation for customers, supplying more energy from clean, renewable power sources. PG&E continues to deliver the electricity from the grid to your home or business, address service outages, maintain the wires, and send your bill, which will include MCE’s generation service. The end result means you get to enjoy the same, reliable electric service AND now you have access to more renewable energy choices.

3 With CCA Before CCA Choice of electric service provider
Default service = You decide (>50% for us) Community-based decision-making (via Board Members) With CCA No choice of electric service provider Default service = 25% renewable energy Investor-owned decision-making (via shareholders) Before CCA Note: Southern CA Edison (2015) is 25% renewables; 41% unspecified sources of power, according to CEC

4 U.S. Community Choice 7 states adopted 3 states considering
CCA is not a new, but is a tested, concept – since 1990s

5 The CCA Landscape in California
Growth of CCAs

6 California Community Choice
2010 2014 2016 2015 2017 MCE was the first community choice energy program to launch in California. Since then, the model has spread to other regions in California. Clean Power SF has recently launched, and Peninsula Clean Energy and Silicon Valley Clean Energy are expected to start serving customers later this yea.

7 CCA Program Growth and Development
Average Annual MW Served

8 19 Board Members. Elected officials. No tax dollars.
Local Control Local boards made up of elected officials who are ratepayers Community in control of their energy choices 19 Board Members. Elected officials. No tax dollars.

9 Snapshot of CCA Portfolios 2016/2017
53% 22% 75%

10 New California Renewables
24 Projects 813 megawatts $1.6 Billion committed 535 MW new solar 266 MW new wind 12 MW new biogas $1.6 billion has been committed by MCE/project partners to develop and construct these CA renewable energy projects. $903 Million: new solar $665 Million: new wind $17 Million: new biogas (waste-to-energy) *MW Totals above include contracted energy load to serve possible additional communities in MCE’s inclusion period. MCE’s 24 new CA In-State and local projects will power 357,445 homes per year. Purpose: making a difference locally and in California. These projects show the demand for California renewable power that MCE has created through its policies.

11 mceCleanEnergy.org

12 Additional Slide Options

13 CCA Construction of New CA Renewables as of January 2017

14 24 Member Communities Marin County + 11 cities Richmond San Pablo
Benicia El Cerrito Napa County + 5 cities Lafayette Walnut Creek

15 Sample Residential Cost Comparison
30% renewable PG&E 50% renewable MCE 100% renewable MCE Electric Delivery $47.18 Electric Generation $45.55 $33.34 $37.97 Added PG&E Fees - $13.78 $13.78 Monthly Cost $92.73 $94.30 $98.93 Needs to be updated with April rates Based on a typical usage of 463 kWh at current PG&E and MCE E-1 rates. Actual differences may vary depending on usage, rate schedule, and other factors. Estimate provided is an average of seasonal rates.


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