California Governor Jerry Brown signed AB 1414 (Friedman) into law late Sunday night, extending the statewide cap on solar permitting fees for seven more years to 2025. The bill previously passed the California Assembly by a vote of 57-15 and Senate 29-11.
“I am pleased that Governor Brown signed this important bill to keep the costs of solar down for consumers across the state,” said Assemblymember Friedman, author of AB 1414. “By setting a reasonable permitting fee cap we will continue to help increase access to solar to everyone. However, this bill also strikes the appropriate balance by ensuring local governments have the flexibility to adjust fee levels if necessary.”
When the law takes effect on January 1, 2018, the statewide cap on permit fees for residential installations drops from $500 to $450. The existing fee cap for commercial projects, such as solar installations on the roofs of large businesses, remains the same at $1,000, plus a sliding scale allowing increasingly higher permit fees for larger solar projects. In addition, AB 1414 expands the cap beyond rooftop solar photovoltaic (PV) panels to include ground-mounted systems such as rural solar installations on agricultural land. It also expands the cap to cover solar thermal installations such as rooftop solar water heating, which captures the heat energy of the sun and stores it in a solar-heated water tank in the home.
“Assemblymember Friedman is a champion for both local solar and local governments, and we greatly appreciate her leadership on AB 1414 and applaud Governor Brown for signing it into law,” said Kelly Knutsen, Senior Policy Advisor of the California Solar Energy Industries Association (CALSEIA). “California continues its leadership in the clean energy economy by lowering the statewide cap on residential permit fees, reflecting the decreased costs of solar permitting due to local governments and installers working together to streamline the permitting process over the past few years.”
As the installed cost of solar has decreased, more Californians across the economic spectrum have installed solar. Since 2014, 53% of residential solar installations were in zip codes with median incomes of $55,000 – $70,000 per year, according to a report by Kevala Analytics. Despite this progress, the “soft costs” of solar installation—including permitting, interconnection, financing, customer acquisition—still remain stubbornly high, comprising over half of total solar installation costs according to the Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory. By lowering the solar permit fee cap to $450 for residential installations, AB 1414 will help lower those soft costs in California.
With the signing of AB 1414, Governor Brown signed into law all nine of CALSEIA’s supported bills that passed the Legislature this year. Here is a list and short summary of those bills in numerical order:
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