Renewable Energy Certificate (United States)

Compliance markets are created by a policy that exists in 29 U.S. states, the District of Columbia, and Puerto Rico, called Renewable Portfolio Standard.[5] RECs can be traded directly from buyer to seller, but third party marketers, brokers, or asset managers are commonly found in the marketplace.[9] This differentiation is intended to promote diversity in the renewable energy mix which in an undifferentiated, competitive REC market, favors the economics and scale achieved by wind farms.The income provided by RECs, and a long-term stabilized market for tags can generate the additional incentive needed to build renewable energy plants.[19] RECs are known under functionally equivalent names, such as Green Tags or Tradable Renewable Certificates (TRCs), depending on the market.Though the Center for Resource Solutions and other groups claim to offer programs to prevent double counting, allowing two entities to take environmental credit for the same electricity is, in effect, the same.[citation needed] Though both sources are properly credited financially, double-counting permits states to report emissions as being up to 50% lower than they actually are, making claims of progress in meeting climate goals dubious.Severin Borenstein, director of the Energy Institute at UC Berkeley's Haas School of Business, writes, "If the certificates are stripped off...separately from the electricity, the FTC [Federal Trade Commission] says...it is deceptive for the TPO [third party owner] to advertise or tell solar buyers they are getting 'clean', 'renewable', or maybe even 'solar' electricity with their lease or power purchase agreement.
energy certificatesmegawatt-hourelectricityrenewable energyrenewable electricitySolar renewable energy certificatesRenewable Portfolio StandardrenewablegeneratorsElectric utilitiesRPS complianceenergy mixCenter for Resource SolutionsSolar electricGeothermalsmall-run-of-the-riverBiomassbiofuelslandfill to gasFuel cellshydrogenfossil fuelscombined heat and powergrid reliabilityUnited States Environmental Protection AgencyHaas School of BusinessCarbon offsetEnergy accountingEnergy developmentEnergy economicsEnergy Efficiency CreditGreen certificateGreen energyGreen tax shiftGuarantee of originRenewable Energy Certificates RegistryRenewable Energy Certificate SystemRenewable energy developmentRenewable Energy PaymentsRenewablesRenewables ObligationSolar-charged vehiclePresident of the United StatesWayback MachineBibcodeU.S. Environmental Protection AgencyRevealElectricity deliveryAutomatic generation controlBackfeedingBase loadDemand factorDroop speed controlElectric powerElectric power qualityElectrical faultEnergy demand managementEnergy return on investmentGrid codeGrid energy storageGrid strengthHome energy storageLoad-followingMerit orderNameplate capacityPeak demandPower factorPower-flow studyRepoweringUtility frequencyVariabilityVehicle-to-gridNon-renewableFossil fuel power stationNatural gasOil shalePetroleumNuclearBiofuelBiogasMarineCurrentOsmoticThermalSustainable biofuelAC powerCogenerationCombined cycleCooling towerInduction generatorMicro CHPMicrogenerationRankine cycleThree-phase electric powerVirtual power plantTransmissiondistributionDemand responseDistributed generationDynamic demandElectric power distributionElectric power systemElectric power transmissionElectrical busbar systemElectrical gridElectrical substationElectricity retailingHigh-voltage direct currentHigh-voltage shore connectionInterconnectorLoad managementMains electricity by countryOverhead power linePower stationPumped hydroSingle-wire earth returnSmart gridSuper gridTransformerTransmission system operatorTransmission towerUtility poleBlack startBrownoutCascading failurePower outageRolling blackoutArc-fault circuit interrupterCircuit breakerEarth-leakageSulfur hexafluorideGenerator interlock kitNumerical relayPower system protectionProtective relayResidual-current deviceAvailability factorCapacity factorCarbon offsets and creditsCost of electricity by sourceEnergy subsidiesEnvironmental taxFeed-in tariffFossil fuel phase-outLoad factorNet meteringPigouvian taxRenewable energy commercializationSpark/Dark/Quark/Bark spreadElectric energy consumptionList of electricity sectors