Dear Jim (Robo) and NextEra (aka Florida Power & Light):

So, Jim, it came as quite the shock recently to learn your company wants to take over our troubled little utilities.

In fact, I can鈥檛 find one person who saw this coming. One equity analyst told me he was 鈥減uzzled why NextEra would buy out a highly leveraged business that’s burning cash and facing major challenges, at least at this price: $4.3 billion. This was highly unexpected.鈥 So kudos, Jim, on keeping it a big secret.

But now that the uau is out of the uluhe, what do we know about you, and more importantly, what should you know about us? I figured Florida 鈥 the Sunshine State 鈥 would have a lot in common with our also-sunny Aloha State.

Turns out, not so much.

hei heco hawaiian electric7. photograph by PF Bentley.

The sale of HECO may well lead to big changes in Hawaii.

PF Bentley/Civil Beat

First, Florida has seven regulated utilities, sometimes known as the 鈥淔EECA鈥 utilities, while here we only have two. As you probably know, Jim, one is a customer-owned co-op; you can鈥檛 have that one.

On the other hand, just as our Legislature was concerned with conservation and energy efficiency, Florida鈥檚 Legislature passed FEECA in part to 鈥渋ncrease the development of demand-side renewable energy systems鈥 and 鈥渆ncourage development of demand-side renewable energy resources.鈥

You went along for a while doing business as Florida Power & Light, or FPL, but on Nov. 25 you and the others persuaded Florida鈥檚 Public Service Commission to discontinue your solar pilots and reduce conservation goals set in 2009 to near zero.

You argued that after installing a whopping 4,000 PV systems in a customer base of 4.6 million, 鈥淔PL little from those pilots, other than confirming that people will rush to get in line for giveaways.鈥

The HECO Companies, on the other hand, serve only 394,910 residential customers, yet over 44,000 of us have already installed rooftop PV; as of last , there were another 8,000 customers in line. Since your rebates were not the state-sponsored tax credits we enjoy here in Hawaii nei, I can understand why you wanted to get out from under them.

In exchange, you made vague promises of future 鈥渦tility-scale鈥 solar. But as parties to the docket and the Southern for Clean Energy pointed out, utility-scale solar is really on the supply-side, and not demand at all. But I鈥檓 sure you knew that. The Southern Alliance called the utilities鈥 proposals 鈥渟hocking.鈥

The question is, do you want to help us continue down the path to island-by-island energy independence, along with embracing the new and improved, decentralized utility business model the PUC has , or are you taking over Hawaiian Electric to bring this all to a screeching halt?

Reaction in Florida was : two PSC Commissioners dissented from this move, and it appears the good people of Florida were pretty irate; they filed hundreds of . Here鈥檚 my fave:

鈥淚 am grateful on this thanksgiving weekend that the PSC has agreed with the lobbyists and large energy monopolies to give them everything they asked for in their sincere effort to protect us from the evils of renewable energy and conservation. I am also thankful that we are not moving in the direction of the lefty, hippie, liberal bastion of Georgia who now has almost 5 times more solar production than the great ‘Not So Sunshiney’ state of Florida.

In unity with your decision and the power companies, I will promptly turn on all my electrical appliances and crank the AC with the door open 鈥 because it is apparently in my best interest.

Regards, Dave D.鈥

And now two Tampa Bay lawmakers are calling for an of Florida鈥檚 PSC. Imagine that!

I have to admit FPL and the HECO Companies have one thing in common: you both fiercely protect your shareholders and revenue streams by diverting as much risk as you can onto ratepayers. Why, just this month Hawaii鈥檚 PUC imposed a new, non-bypassable on all of us to secure low-interest loans for those with bad credit and low income so they can install PV, at no risk to the utility. Even those who already paid for their PV systems will now pay again for PV for others. You must have been positively giddy, Jim, to see virtually no one here in Hawaii paid any attention to the GEMS fee.

Beyond Florida, here鈥檚 what I learned about your company:

  • You paid a $2.5 million settlement in 2010 for thousands of bird kills by your wind turbines in California. This was one of the very few penalties imposed on a company like yours, Jim, and you need to know we have lots of endangered flora and fauna here in Hawaii, not to mention protected sea creatures.
  • Last year in Ontario, unhappy with being parodied as 鈥淣ext Terror鈥 and 鈥淣ext Error鈥 by a 32-year-old mother of two who was upset over a planned project near her home, you Esther Wrightman with a SLAPP suit (鈥渟trategic lawsuit against public participation鈥) claiming that she was a because she sought donations.聽聽 I hear she鈥檚 as a result. You will be happy to learn that Hawaii passed anti-SLAPP in 2001, so you can save a few pennies on legal fees here in the Aloha State.

Meanwhile, you鈥檝e sure been busy back in our islands. Your NextEra Energy Hawaii told the PUC last year that it has already spent a pile of money chasing a cable between Maui and Oahu, and to hurry up and let you build it; for reasons not entirely clear you intervened in the Castle & Cooke Lanai wind docket; Neil let slip in his State of the State (see video at minute 26:11) that you wanted the state to buy lands on Oahu so you could put in (something) utility-scale, although 鈥淣extEra鈥 instantly disappeared from the official text; and you just filed for approval of a PPA for 15 MW of industrial solar in Waianae. Think you would make out better buying and selling power to and from yourself, Jim? Think: Solar.

The news source 鈥淯tility Dive鈥 thinks you might use us as a . After all, some say we are the only state where solar plus storage is cost-competitive with the grid. The question is, do you want to help us continue down the path to island-by-island energy independence, along with embracing the new and improved, decentralized utility business model the PUC has , or are you taking over Hawaiian Electric to bring this all to a screeching halt?

I will let you go for now, Jim, but I see on Dec. 7, 2014, you told Richard Borreca and Star-Advertiser staff that when it comes to the undersea cable, “We haven’t decided yet.鈥 This is troubling, Jim, as Hawaii鈥檚 energy landscape is littered with failed attempts by mega-corporations to decide what鈥檚 best for us, without asking us first. We Hawaii residents like to be included in any conversation that impacts us, our islands and our resources. Just ask Robbie Alm and billionaire David Murdock what happens when community is ignored.

So we all clear on that, Jim? Sure hope so, because this is not Florida, and the good people of I Aloha Molokai and Friends of Lanai 鈥 just two of Hawaii鈥檚 many thriving environmental alliances 鈥 can energize in a nano-second.

And unlike Esther Wrightman, we鈥檙e not moving. Imagine that.

We need your help.

Unfortunately, being named a聽finalist for a聽Pulitzer prize聽doesn’t make us immune to financial pressures. The fact is,聽our revenue hasn鈥檛 kept pace with our need to grow,听.

Civil Beat is a nonprofit, reader-supported newsroom based in 贬补飞补颈驶颈. We鈥檙e looking to build a more resilient, diverse and deeply impactful media landscape, and聽we hope you鈥檒l help by .

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