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Report Paints Scathing Picture of Duke's Solar Support

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Friday, October 16, 2015   

RALEIGH, N.C. - A new report paints a scathing picture of the top 12 players building support for anti-solar campaigns around the country - a dirty dozen of solar, so to speak - and Duke Energy is front and center.

According to the report from the Environment North Carolina Research and Policy Center, Duke claims to support solar, with its $500 million investment in utility-owned solar in the state. But Jim Warren, executive director of the clean-power advocacy group NC WARN, said the report shows how the utility actually is working to dismantle pro-solar policies.

"They have a squad of lobbyists and they have a lot of campaign money," he said, "and they exercise both of those as well as other means of influence persistently to impact and pollute state government."

The report maintains that Duke's support for solar is restricted to those owned by the utility and those that contribute to its bottom line. In a response to the report in the Charlotte Business Journal, Duke defended the company's solar record and stated that the anti-solar claims don't make sense considering that North Carolina ranks fourth in the nation for solar capacity.

Along with six other utilities, the report highlights the anti-solar workings of organizations including the American Legislative Exchange Council and the Koch brothers' American Energy Alliance. Although NC WARN has felt the presence of anti-solar groups in North Carolina, Warren said the report still was somewhat surprising.

"Just how much firepower Duke and the Kochs and their folks have in their ability to get out and to persist with a very deceptive message was quite appalling," he said.

A Duke spokesman pointed out that the utility has spent $4 billion nationally on renewable power. Warren countered that most of that investment is occurring in states with competitive markets, not monopolies as in North Carolina. Here, he added, Duke is doing the bare minimum.

"The proof is in their official filing with the utilities commission," he said. "They plan to do a total of 4 percent of all generation from renewables 15 years from now. Four percent. So it really puts light to the greenwashing that Duke Energy uses to try to make its corporate bad behavior look better."

Warren said Duke has attempted to block legislation that would allow third-party solar financing and solar leasing in North Carolina, which could give solar in the state a dramatic boost.

The report is online at environmentnorthcarolina.org.


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