Last DSIRE Review: 01/15/2013
Program Overview:
State: |
Kansas |
Incentive Type: |
Interconnection |
Eligible Renewable/Other Technologies: |
Solar Thermal Electric, Photovoltaics, Landfill Gas, Wind, Biomass, Hydroelectric, Small Hydroelectric, Fuel Cells using Renewable Fuels |
Applicable Sectors: |
Commercial, Industrial, Residential, Nonprofit, Schools, Local Government, State Government, Fed. Government, Agricultural, Institutional |
Applicable Utilities: | Investor-owned utilities |
System Capacity Limit: | 200 kW for non-residential; 25 kW for residential |
Standard Agreement: | Yes |
Insurance Requirements: | "Additional" liability insurance not required for systems that meet certain technical standards |
External Disconnect Switch: | Utility's discretion |
Net Metering Required: | Yes |
Authority 1:
Date Enacted:
Date Effective:
|
Kansas Statutes 66-1263, et seq.
5/22/2009
7/1/2009
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Authority 2:
Date Enacted:
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K.A.R. 82-17-1, et seq.
7/9/2010
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Summary:
Kansas adopted the Net Metering and Easy Connection Act in May 2009 (see K.S.A. 66-1263 through 66-1271), establishing interconnection guidelines and net metering for customer-owned generators. Net metering and the accompanying interconnection guidelines apply to systems that generate electricity using solar, wind, methane, biomass or hydro resources, and to fuel cells using hydrogen produced by an eligible renewable technology, with a rated capacity of 25 kilowatts (kW) or less for residential customers, 200 kW or less for non-residential customers and 1.5 megawatts (MW) for Cloud County and Dodge City community colleges.
Generators must meet all applicable safety, performance, interconnection and reliability standards established by the National Electrical Code, the National Electrical Safety Code, and the Institute of Electrical and Electronics Engineers, Underwriters Laboratories, the Federal Energy Regulatory Commission, and any local governing authorities. The utility must provide a bi-directional meter to the customer at no additional cost to the customer. The utility may not require a customer-generator to purchase additional liability insurance if all safety and interconnection requirements are met. However, utilities are authorized to require interconnected customers to install an external disconnect switch.
The Kansas Corporation Commission adopted rules (K.A.R. 82-17-1 through 82-17-5) to implement the statute’s interconnection and reliability standards in July 2010. These rules are limited, and they include additional protection for the utility in the event of disruptive problems to the utility's system caused by a net-metered facility.
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