The Voice of Distibuted Energy
Menu
  • Stories
    • Distributed Generation
    • Storage & EVs
    • Virtual Power
    • Energy Efficiency
    • Policy
    • Microgrids Now
    • Prosumers
    • Decentralized Grid
  • Podcast
  • Resources
    • White Papers
    • Case Studies
    • Content Services
  • About
  • Newsletter
  • Substack
Energy Changemakers
Subscribe
Decentralized Grid

What Utilities and DER Companies Don’t Get About Each Other

How history and government policy created their awkward relationship

by Elisa Wood

October 25, 2024
Share

The relationship between utilities and distributed energy resource (DER) companies is fraught, strange and complicated.

It’s not surprising that acrimony exists between the two industries. They compete for a nearly half-trillion dollar US retail electricity market.

But it’s not a typical business rivalry because they both must play on the same platform, the electric grid, which utilities control with monopoly clout. That means if distributed energy resource (DER) companies want their projects to access the grid, and they mostly do (at least so far), they need to secure an interconnection agreement with a utility, their competitor. That’s not always easy.

But it’s even more complicated than that. The footing that distributed energy companies traverse changes from state to state. In some states, like New York, utilities aren’t allowed to own generation, making it easier for distributed energy companies to make inroads. In other states, like those in the southeastern US, the utility owns and controls the entire system — generation, transmission and distribution  — and can more easily keep distributed energy competitors at bay. Witness what’s happening in Colorado with virtual power plants.

Be an Energy Changemaker. Subscribe to our free newsletter.

And adding to the strangeness, sometimes utilities and distributed energy companies act not as competitors but as partners working to build projects together. Given that utilities have big balance sheets, such partnerships are lucrative for these distributed energy companies, and they’d rather keep the peace than appear as outright challengers to the utility monopoly model.

Utilities are the Goliath to distributed energy’s David. Investor-owned utilities account for 57% of retail electricity sales, with another 29% sold by municipal and public power utilities and cooperatives. The remaining 15% is sold by competitive retail suppliers, of which some provide distributed energy resources.

So it’s not surprising that DER companies consistently describe utilities as among their biggest obstacles to success. 

This is the kind of business relationship no one wants to have. 

So, how the heck did we end up here? Needless to say, this weird dynamic didn’t come from nowhere.

In this week’s Energy Changemakers podcast, What Utilities and DER Companies Don’t Get about Each Other, senior energy and climate leader Bill Prindle traces the historical events and policy changes over several decades that led us to this uneasy point. I chose to bring this topic to him because he has worked with both utilities and DER companies during his 40-year career with such organizations as ICF, the American Council for an Energy-Efficient Economy, and the Alliance to Save Energy. He gets where both utilities and DER companies are coming from. I think you’ll find this conversation interesting and walk away with a strong perspective of the utility industry’s history and motivators.

Listen to the podcast.

Subscribe to our free weekly newsletter about all things distributed energy.
Subscribe

Top Podcast

energy changemakers podcast

A Complete List of Energy Changemakers Podcasts

The Energy Changemakers Podcast, with host Elisa Wood, is available every other Wednesday on Apple and Spotify.

Latest Resources

2026 Market Survey: Microgrid and Distributed Energy Projects Grow in Complexity

Reports of distributed energy’s demise have been greatly exaggerated, according to a 2025 survey of distributed energy and microgrid industry professionals. When the One Big Beautiful Bill Act became law in July 2025, many industry experts feared solar-heavy distributed energy development would dry up with the loss of federal incentives. While survey respondents (67%) say […]
Ameresco energy allies

Energy Allies: Communities and Utilities Building Resilience Together

This white paper examines how successful partnerships among communities, utilities, and energy service providers can improve the grid and achieve mutually beneficial outcomes.
microgrids as building blocks

Microgrids as a Building Block for Future Grids

This white paper is the fourth in a series of seven white papers in support of the DOE Microgrid R&D Program and presents a broad vision for future grids where microgrids serve as a building block along with technologies that would need to be developed, use case scenarios and the research targets. The DOE Microgrid […]
utility bills

Utility Bills are Rising: PowerLines

New polling by PowerLines, a nonpartisan consumer education nonprofit, reveals the toll of rising utility bills on American energy consumers.

RSS Microgrids Now

  • Against the Odds, Communities Can Build Local Energy. Here’s How
  • Microgrids Are a Goldmine for Grid Operators — They Just Don’t Know It
  • What Makes a Community Microgrid Actually Work? Start by Listening, Not Engineering
  • Is Distributed Wind Poised for a Second Act in Virtual Power Plants and Microgrids?
  • Data Centers Are Changing Microgrid Companies. Scale Microgrid’s New Acquisition Offers the Latest Example
The Voice of Distributed Energy
Learn about grid edge opportunities
Subscribe
Energy Changemakers
Energy Changemakers
600 Twentyninth Place Ct #1055
Charlottesville, VA 22901
elisa@energychangemakers.com
© Wood Energy Writers LLC. All rights reserved.
  • Terms of Service
  • Privacy Policy