Nevada Code § 704.775

Billing; calculation of net energy measurement; treatment of excess electricity; status of net metering system under portfolio standard
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1. The billing period for net metering
must be a monthly period.
2. The net energy measurement must be
calculated in the following manner:
(a) The utility shall measure, in kilowatt-hours,
the net electricity produced or consumed during the billing period:
(1) For a net metering system that serves
only one meter, in accordance with normal metering practices.
(2) For a solar-powered affordable housing
system that serves multiple meters, by measuring the total generation output of
the solar-powered affordable housing system using a production meter. The
utility shall, for capacity allocations, calculate the total kilowatt-hour
output associated with each users allocated share of the solar-powered
affordable housing systems production and deduct the allocated total
kilowatt-hour output from each users total measured consumption.
(b) If the electricity supplied by the utility
exceeds the electricity generated by the customer-generator, or the
customer-generators allocated share of the electricity generated by a solar-powered
affordable housing system, which is fed back to the utility during the billing
period, the customer-generator must be billed for the net electricity supplied
by the utility.
(c) Except as otherwise provided in NRS 704.7732 , if the electricity generated
by the customer-generator, or the customer-generators allocated share of the
electricity generated by a solar-powered affordable housing system, which is
fed back to the utility exceeds the electricity supplied by the utility during
the billing period:
(1) Neither the utility nor the
customer-generator is entitled to compensation for the electricity provided to
the other during the billing period.
(2) The excess electricity which is fed
back to the utility during the billing period is carried forward to the next
billing period as an addition to the kilowatt-hours generated by the
customer-generator in that billing period. If the customer-generator is billed
for electricity pursuant to a time-of-use rate schedule, the excess electricity
carried forward must be added to the same time-of-use period as the time-of-use
period in which it was generated unless the subsequent billing period lacks a
corresponding time-of-use period. In that case, the excess electricity carried
forward must be apportioned evenly among the available time-of-use periods.
(3) Excess electricity may be carried
forward to subsequent billing periods indefinitely, but a customer-generator is
not entitled to receive compensation for any excess electricity that remains
if:
(I) The net metering system ceases
to operate or is disconnected from the utilitys transmission and distribution
facilities;
(II) The customer-generator ceases
to be a customer of the utility at the premises served by the net metering
system; or
(III) The customer-generator
transfers the net metering system to another person.
(4) The value of the excess electricity
must not be used to reduce any other fee or charge imposed by the utility.
3. If the cost of purchasing and
installing a net metering system was paid for:
(a) In whole or in part by a utility, the
electricity generated by the net metering system shall be deemed to be
electricity that the utility generated or acquired from a renewable energy
system for the purposes of complying with its portfolio standard pursuant to NRS 704.7801 to 704.7828 , inclusive.
(b) Entirely by a customer-generator, including,
without limitation, a customer-generator that is the owner of a solar-powered
affordable housing system, the Commission shall issue to the customer-generator
portfolio energy credits for use within the system of portfolio energy credits
adopted by the Commission pursuant to NRS
704.7821 and 704.78213 equal to
the electricity generated by the net metering system.
4. A bill for electrical service is due at
the time established pursuant to the terms of the contract between the utility
and the customer-generator.

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