One of the top clean-energy nonprofits in Hawaii sharply criticized the state on Wednesday over its much anticipated order on decoupling, which separates聽Hawaiian Electric’s revenues from its sales.
, headed by Jeff Mikulina, said the commission failed to adopt proposals to tie the utility’s revenues to clean energy performance.
The nonprofit also faulted the PUC’s rationale for not doing so, noting how the regulators’聽decision says performance-based utility regulations are “impractical” at this time because the utility lacks a clear strategic plan and because the聽pending sale of Hawaiian Electric to NextEra Energy could have a major impact on the operation of the Hawaiian Electric companies.
鈥淭he tail is wagging the dog here,” Mikulina said in a release. “We shouldn’t use the lack of a utility strategic vision as a reason to protect the status quo. It should be the other way around.”
He pointed at the fact that the decoupling review began long before Florida-based NextEra and Hawaiian Electric Industries announced their $4.3 billion merger deal and before Hawaiian Electric鈥檚 power supply improvement plans were released.
Blue Planet also聽highlighted how聽the incentives currently in place within the decoupling mechanism haven’t yielded utility performance that customers demand.
鈥淭he Commission had a perfect opportunity to shape the structure under which customers should expect the 鈥榥ew鈥 NextEra-owned utility to perform,鈥 Mikulina said.
鈥淚nstead, customers will be asked to accept a new utility operating under the old incentive system,” he said, noting the status-quo strategy of聽fossil fuels, high rates, resistance to grid modernization and limiting customer choice on rooftop solar.
Read the commission’s order, signed by new PUC Chair Randy Iwase and Commissioner Lorraine Akiba and Mike Champley, below.
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Nathan Eagle is a deputy editor for Civil Beat. You can reach him by email at neagle@civilbeat.org or follow him on Twitter at , Facebook and Instagram .