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2019-137 Solar Energy Installation at Water and Wastewater FacilitiesDate: July 5, 2019 Report No. 2019-137 INFORMAL STAFF REPORT TO MAYOR AND CITY COUNCIL SUBJECT: Solar Energy Installation at Water and Wastewater Facilities BACKGROUND: City Council requested that staff provide a report of the potential savings or costs to the City associated with the installation of solar panels to meet the electric demands of the water and wastewater facilities. DISCUSSION: Contained within the proposed budgets for water and wastewater is a significant expenditure for electric power from DME. Both the water and wastewater utilities pay DME the Renewable Cost Adjustment (RCA) of $0.004/kwh to ensure that all electric energy used by the facilities is renewable. The budgeted amounts of electric energy for fiscal year 2019/2020 are $1,410,789 for the water utility and $1,221,000 for the wastewater utility. When DME achieves the goal of the Renewable Denton plan sometime in 2021 or 2022, there will be no need for customers to pay the RCA as all energy will be renewable. This reduction in cost will save water and wastewater approximately $111,793 per year based upon historical demand. DME personnel met with water and wastewater to discuss the type of analysis needed to evaluate the economic feasibility of installing solar panels at the major facilities of each utility. The economic screening analysis performed by DME that is provided herein is intended to provide a very high-level assessment of the economic feasibility of such a program. The screening analysis does not include any discussion of the physical requirements necessary to install solar panels and ancillary equipment such as the number of acres required per facility, the structural ability of existing roof systems to carry the load of the solar panels, sufficient land for construction lay- down, the impact of installation on operation of the facilities, the interconnection requirements for integrating the solar generation systems with the DME distribution grid, etc. That level of analysis will be required if the Council decides to pursue this approach. The screening analysis utilizes public information provided by the Department of Energy’s National Renewable Energy Laboratory (NREL) on the capital, maintenance and operating costs for rooftop solar installations. The costs provided by NREL do not include the cost of land acquisition or structural improvements on existing buildings to meet local building codes. Analytical Approach: DME obtained multiple years of actual electrical demand for each meter at a water or wastewater utility facility. This meter data was then filtered and segregated to hours that Date: July 5, 2019 Report No. 2019-137 a solar generation facility could provide energy and hours in which DME would be required to provide energy. Generally the daylight hourly demand of the facilities were modeled to be met with solar arrays sized to meet the peak demand of the facility. Energy required during non-solar generation periods was modeled to be supplied by DME using current rates and adjusted for removal of the RCA in 2022. To monetize the value of the Investment Tax Credits available to solar generation facilities and achieve the lowest cost of energy, DME assumed the solar arrays and associated equipment would be owned by a third party and the water or wastewater utility would enter into a 20-year Power Purchase Agreement (PPA). The financial model used assumed that the projects would be 80% debt financed and achieved a pre-tax internal rate of return to the owner of 21%. The cash flows required to support this debt and equity return were used to price the solar energy. The result of this deal structure is that the City would not have to issue bonds or take on incremental debt to support the installation of the solar panels. The effective price of the PPA was calculated at $0.18/kWh as compared to the all-in rate for DME of $.09164/kWh. The results of the analysis including the net present value to city for the water and wastewater systems are presented in the table below: Denton Wastewater System Capacity Factor 17% Size of Solar (kW)1604.88 Solar Cost ($/kWh)(0.18)$ # of Acres 2.43 NPV No Solar Cost (7,254,985.18)$ NPV Solar Cost (11,714,586.01)$ Delta (Additional Cost)4,459,600.83$ % Renewable 22% Denton Water System Capacity Factor 17% Size of Solar (kW)2139.00 Solar Cost ($/kWh)(0.18)$ # of Acres 3.24 NPV No Solar Cost (9,574,610.55)$ NPV Solar Cost (15,518,417.53)$ Delta (Additional Cost)5,943,806.98$ % Renewable 22% Date: July 5, 2019 Report No. 2019-137 CONCLUSION: Because DME will provide 100% renewable energy to the water and wastewater utilities of the City of Denton at a current cost of approximately $0.09164/kWh and that price will drop to $0.091264 when DME achieves the Renewable Denton Plan, the construction of solar panels at water and wastewater facilities that are estimated to produce energy at the rate of $0.18/kWh only increases the cost of water and wastewater operations. The screening analysis definitively demonstrates that the net present value of the incremental costs that would have to be recovered from citizens and customers of these utilities is in excess of $10 million. The average annual increased energy cost for these combined utilities is estimated at over $851,000 per year were such systems installed. STAFF CONTACT: Terry Naulty Asst. General Manager DME Terry.naulty@cityofdenton.com (940) 349-7565 REQUESTOR: Council Member Briggs PARTICIPATING DEPARTMENTS: DME, Utilities Administration STAFF TIME TO COMPLETE REPORT : 41 hours