Ellsworth ME Solar, LLC v. Public Utilities Comission

2026 ME 10
CourtSupreme Judicial Court of Maine
DecidedFebruary 5, 2026
DocketPUC-25-60
StatusPublished
AuthorCONNORS, J.

This text of 2026 ME 10 (Ellsworth ME Solar, LLC v. Public Utilities Comission) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Judicial Court of Maine primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Ellsworth ME Solar, LLC v. Public Utilities Comission, 2026 ME 10 (Me. 2026).

Opinion

MAINE SUPREME JUDICIAL COURT Reporter of Decisions Decision: 2026 ME 10 Docket: PUC-25-60 Argued: December 11, 2025 Decided: February 5, 2026

Panel: STANFILL, C.J., and MEAD, CONNORS, LAWRENCE, DOUGLAS, and LIPEZ, JJ.

ELLSWORTH ME SOLAR, LLC

v.

PUBLIC UTILITIES COMMISSION

CONNORS, J.

[¶1] Ellsworth ME Solar, LLC, appeals from an order of the Public Utilities

Commission denying its petition for a good cause exemption from the 2024

Commercial Operation Date (COD) deadline in Maine’s Net Energy Billing

statute, 35-A M.R.S. § 3209-A(9) (2025), as well as the Commission’s decision

not to grant Ellsworth Solar’s petition to reopen the record pursuant to 65-407

C.M.R. ch. 110, § 11(D) (2025). We affirm.

I. BACKGROUND

A. The Applicable Law

1. The Statutory Framework

[¶2] Much of the relevant legal background is set forth in Snakeroot Solar,

LLC v. Pub. Utils. Comm’n, 2025 ME 64, 340 A.3d 99, a previous appeal of a denial 2

of a petition for a good cause exemption. As discussed in more detail in that

decision, in 2019, the Legislature expanded the eligibility for participation in

Maine’s net energy billing (NEB) program to include customers with an interest

in a renewable energy (solar) facility with a generating capacity of up to five

megawatts. Id. ¶ 2; P.L. 2019, ch. 478, §§ A-3, A-4, codified as amended at 35-A

M.R.S. § 3209-A and 35-A M.R.S. § 3209-B (2025) (2019 NEB Act).1

[¶3] The 2019 NEB Act prompted what has been referred to as the “solar

gold rush”—a sharp increase in the development of solar projects seeking to

connect to the grid, leading to a steep increase in electricity rates charged to

consumers. Snakeroot Solar, 2025 ME 64, ¶ 3, 340 A.3d 99; Legis. Rec. H-750 to

-51 (1st Spec. Sess. 2021). As a result, in 2021, the Legislature added new

eligibility criteria for projects between two and five megawatts. P.L. 2021, ch.

390 (effective Oct. 18, 2021), codified as amended at 35-A M.R.S. § 3209-A(7)

(2021 NEB Amendment). The 2021 NEB Amendment established a series of

requirements for projects to be eligible to participate in the NEB program, one

of which was that the project have a Commercial Operation Date (COD) on or

1 “Net energy billing” is “a billing and metering practice under which a customer is billed on the basis of the difference between the kilowatt-hours delivered by a transmission and distribution utility to the customer over a billing period and the kilowatt-hours delivered by the customer to the transmission and distribution utility over the billing period, taking into account accumulated unused kilowatt-hour credits from the previous billing period.” 35-A M.R.S. § 3209-A(1)(C) (2025). It is a renewable energy incentive program “intended to encourage electricity generation from renewable resources.” Conservation L. Found. v. Pub. Utils. Comm’n, 2018 ME 120, ¶ 2, 192 A.3d 596. 3

before December 31, 2024. 35-A M.R.S. § 3209-A(7); Snakeroot Solar, 2025 ME

64, ¶ 4, 340 A.3d 99.

[¶4] The 2021 NEB Amendment included a still applicable provision that

permits the Commission to grant exemptions from those requirements:

An entity proposing [a project for] the development of a distributed generation resource that does not meet one or more of the requirements of this subsection may petition the commission for a good-cause exemption due to external delays outside of the entity’s control, which the commission may grant if it finds that, without the external delays, the entity could reasonably have been expected to meet the requirements.

35-A M.R.S. § 3209-A(7).

[¶5] In 2023, the NEB program was amended again, this time to require

that projects between one and two megawatts satisfy the 2024 COD deadline.

P.L. 2023, ch. 411 (effective Oct. 25, 2023), codified as amended at 35-A M.R.S.

§ 3209-A(9) (2023 NEB Amendment).2

2. Snakeroot Solar

[¶6] In Snakeroot Solar, a solar energy company appealed from the

Commission’s denial of a request for a good cause exemption under the 2021

2 Most recently, the Legislature enacted a December 31, 2025, cutoff date for new NEB entrants, reduced the tariff credits received by participating projects over three megawatts and their subscribers, and imposed a monthly fee on certain existing projects receiving kilowatt-hour credits, to begin on January 1, 2026. P.L. 2025, ch. 430 (effective Sept. 24, 2025), codified as amended at 35-A M.R.S. § 3209-A(10)(11), 32-A M.R.S. § 3209-B(9) (2025), and 35-A M.R.S. § 3209-F (2025). 4

NEB Amendment for a project with a generating capacity of 4.98 megawatts.

Snakeroot Solar, 2025 ME 64, ¶ 1, 340 A.3d 99. We affirmed, concluding, as

relevant to the instant appeal, that (1) “external delays” within the meaning of

the statutory framework mean events that are outside of the interconnection

process (connecting the facility to the grid)—“a process that is typically ‘long,

complicated, . . . and subject to frequent interruptions’”; and (2) as reflected by

the statute’s use of discretionary “may” language, the good cause exemption is

not an entitlement. Id. ¶¶ 29-32, 34 (citation omitted).

[¶7] Also relevant to the instant appeal, we rejected Snakeroot Solar’s

argument that the Commission’s denial of the exemption was arbitrary because

the Commission had granted an exemption to another developer, Pembroke

Solar LLC, noting that “Pembroke’s circumstances at the time it petitioned for a

good-cause exemption were markedly different than Snakeroot’s” because

“Pembroke experienced an eleventh-hour, unanticipated change in the utility’s

equipment procurement schedule” that “unexpectedly increased from

thirty-four to eighty-one weeks,” pushing the COD well beyond the 2024

deadline. Id. ¶ 42. 5

B. Project History

[¶8] The following facts and procedural background are drawn from the

Commission’s order dated December 13, 2024, and the administrative record.

See Off. of the Pub. Advoc. v. Pub. Utils. Comm’n, 2023 ME 77, ¶ 2, 306 A.3d 633.

[¶9] Ellsworth Solar initiated a project to develop a ground-mounted

solar photovoltaic generating facility with a capacity of 4.98 megawatts and

submitted an interconnection application to Versant Power, the transmission

and distribution utility to which the project would connect, in May 2020. Both

parties signed an interconnection agreement on February 17, 2021.

[¶10] In March 2021, Versant notified Ellsworth Solar that the project

would need to undergo a cluster study.3 In September 2022, Ellsworth Solar’s

project received Section I.3.9 approval, and Ellsworth Solar signed an NEB

agreement with Versant on December 19, 2022.

As explained in Snakeroot Solar, where multiple projects with a combined generating capacity 3

of twenty megawatts or more propose to interconnect in a defined local area, ISO New England, the governing independent system operator of the transmission system, may require a transmission study, called a “cluster study,” for all the projects with a capacity greater than one megawatt. After successful completion of such a study, the ISO must then issue “Section I.3.9 approval.” See Snakeroot Solar, 2025 ME 64, ¶¶ 7-10, 340 A.3d 99.

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