City of Austin - Renewables Portfolio Standard
Program Details
- Program ID
- 897
- Last Updated
- 6/30/2025
Eligibility
Program Summary
The City Council of Austin, Texas, first adopted a renewable portfolio standard (RPS) in 1999 (Resolution No. 990211-36). The RPS was subsequently amended several times, with the current RPS goal—65% renewables by 2027—among the most ambitious in the nation. In 2019, the city's Climate Equity Plan established a goal of net-zero community-wide greenhouse gas emissions by 2040. Eligible Technologies Renewable resources include those that rely on energy derived directly from the sun, wind, geothermal, hydroelectric, wave or tidal energy, or biomass or biomass-based waste products, including landfill gas. Goals and Requirements The RPS for Austin Energy (the City of Austin’s municipal utility) and the city as a whole include the following renewable energy and greenhouse gas emission goals, targets, and standards: 2020: meet 50 percent of all energy needs through the use of renewable resources 2025: meet 55 percent of all energy needs through the use of renewable resources, with electricity generation at 86% carbon-free 2027: meet 65% of all energy needs through the use of renewable resources2030: reduce carbon dioxide emissions from all city-controlled generation resources to zero by 2030, with electricity generation at 93% carbon-free 2035: electricity generation is 100% carbon-free 2040: achieve a goal of reaching net-zero community-wide greenhouse gas emissions In its 2035 generation plan, Austin Energy implemented an interim target of 70% renewable by 2030. As of December 2024, Austin Energy's generation mix is 70% carbon-free -- 61% renewable and 9% nuclear.Carve-Outs In August 2014 the City Council increased the RPS solar carve-out by setting a goal for Austin Energy of 600 megawatts (MW) of new utility-scale solar by 2017 and 200 MW of “local solar” by 2020, of which at least 100 MW is to be customer-controlled (behind-the-meter) solar.In its 2030 generation plan, Austin Energy stated it will achieve 375 MW of "local solar" by the end of 2030, of which 200 MW is to be customer-sited (behind-the-meter and front-of-the-meter). It is also committed to 30 MW of local thermal storage by 2027 and 40 MW of local thermal storage by 2030. The 2035, meanwhile, plan aims for 405 MW of "local solar" by the end of 2035, including 160 MW of existing capacity, and continues the local thermal storage target.The 2035 plan also includes a focus on energy efficiency and demand response, with Austin Energy planning to save 975 MW by 2027 through energy efficiency, 78 – 102 MW by 2027 through demand response, and 270 – 470 MW by 2035 through demand response. Compliance In August 2014 the City Council directed the City Manager to develop and implement the “policies, procedures, timelines, and targets necessary to make Austin the leading city in the nation in the effort to reduce and reverse the negative impacts of global warming.” To achieve this vision and the above goals, the City Council specified that the City Manager implement several design enhancements to its solar market. First, Austin Energy’s commercial and residential solar incentive program will be revised to explicitly allow third-party leased system hosts to participate in a commercial and residential incentive program. Second, the Residential Solar Tariff (i.e., the Value of Solar Rate) incentive will be enhanced in the following ways: allow excess credits to be rolled over from year to year (instead of being reset at zero at the start of a calendar year), allow solar energy systems of any size to be eligible for the Residential Solar Tariff by removing the existing 20 kW cap, set an annual price floor equal to the residential electric rates of a “tier 3 customer” (i.e., $0.091 per kilowatt-hour for the rates approved September 2013), allow leased system hosts to receive value of solar credits, and adopt a 5-year rolling average in calculating the annual assessment. Third, the City Manager will develop a comprehensive strategy for the deployment and use of distribution-level and transmission-level storage technologies with a target of 200 MW of fast response storage by 2024. Among its other initiatives designed to promote renewable energy and reduce greenhouse gas emissions, the Austin City Council has also adopted the mayor's Climate Protection Plan (Resolution 20070215-023), set a green power procurement goal of powering municipal buildings and facilities using 100% renewable energy by 2012, and implemented advanced building codes to maximize energy efficiency. Cost Mitigation Measures Notably, Austin’s Affordability Goal (set in 2011 and reaffirmed in August 2014) calls for rate increases to residential, commercial, and industrial Austin Energy customers to not exceed 2% per year, with a goal of maintaining Austin Energy’s rates in the lower 50 percent of Texas rates overall.
Contact & Resources
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