NJ Energy News — March 2026

NJ BPU’s Historic March 2026 Orders:
What It Actually Means for Your Electric Bill

Published March 10, 2026 8 min read New Jersey
Omar Jackson Solar by Omar
Omar Jackson — Founder, Solar by Omar | NJ Solar Installer I monitor every BPU order that affects NJ homeowners. The March 4th orders are genuinely significant — here’s the plain-English breakdown of what each one means and how to use them to your advantage.

✨ Key Takeaways for NJ Homeowners

  • 5 major orders issued March 4, 2026 — the largest single-day energy action in NJ history under Governor Sherrill
  • Community Solar expanded to 3,000 MW with a guaranteed 20% bill discount — but only for renters and shaded roofs
  • 355 MW of grid batteries awarded, 645 MW more solicited — state grid stabilization that helps everyone but takes years
  • NJ homeowners with good roofs should not settle for 20% — rooftop solar + NJ SuSI typically eliminates 50–100% of your bill
  • SuSI TREC rate still at $85.90/MWh — lock it in now before capacity blocks fill

On March 4, 2026, the NJ Board of Public Utilities issued five orders in a single session — the most aggressive single-day energy action the state has taken in years. Most of the coverage was written for lawyers and energy developers. This is the homeowner’s translation: what each order actually does, who it helps, and what you should do about it.

Why the BPU Acted So Aggressively in March 2026

The March 4th orders didn’t happen in a vacuum. They were a direct response to Governor Mikie Sherrill’s Day One Executive Orders, signed January 20, 2026 — the day she took office. Governor Sherrill declared a State of Emergency on Utility Costs on her first day and directed the BPU to take immediate action on rate relief, battery storage, and community solar.

The context: New Jersey residential electricity rates have been among the highest in the country. PSE&G, JCP&L, and Atlantic City Electric have all filed for significant rate increases over the past several years. The PJM regional grid — which powers New Jersey — has been strained by retiring power plants, surging data center demand, and severe weather events. New Jersey ratepayers have been absorbing the cost of those pressures for years.

The March 4th orders represent the state’s most comprehensive attempt yet to address that problem — through a combination of grid-scale storage, expanded community solar, and new utility-scale solar incentive programs.

The 5 BPU Orders — Plain English Summary

Order 1
Community Solar Expansion — 3,000 MW

3,000 MW of new community solar capacity opened effective March 6, 2026 — the largest community solar expansion in any state’s history. All subscribers must receive a minimum 20% bill discount. Low and moderate income households get at least 25% off. The program runs through 2029 or until fully subscribed. New Jersey’s community solar program has already delivered over $70 million in bill credits to 37,000+ subscribers — this expands that to hundreds of thousands more households.

Order 2
GSESP Tranche 1 Awards — 355 MW of Grid Batteries

The BPU awarded incentives to three transmission-scale battery storage projects totaling 355 MW under the Garden State Energy Storage Program (GSESP). The projects — including Jupiter Power’s 200 MW Woods Landing Storage in Sayreville and Elevate Renewables’ 150 MW Garden State Reliability Project in Bergen County — will provide on-demand grid stabilization during peak demand periods. BPU analysis projects these projects will save ratepayers more than $169 million over their lifetimes by moderating wholesale electricity prices.

Order 3
GSESP Tranche 2 Launch — 645 MW More Storage

The same day, the BPU opened Tranche 2 of the GSESP, soliciting an additional 645 MW of storage — fulfilling Governor Sherrill’s Executive Order 2 directive within 45 days. Combined with Tranche 1’s 355 MW, this hits New Jersey’s full 1,000 MW transmission-scale storage target required by law. The state’s broader goal is 2,000 MW of grid storage by 2030. Pre-qualification submissions are due June 10, 2026, with final bids by August 7, 2026.

Order 4
Competitive Solar Incentive (CSI) — Solicitation 3 Awards

The BPU awarded 3 of 18 projects from the third solicitation of the Competitive Solar Incentive (CSI) Program, totaling 24.1 MW of new utility-scale solar generation. The CSI program uses competitive bidding to bring new grid-supply solar online at the lowest possible cost — these aren’t rooftop systems, they’re large-scale solar farms feeding the NJ grid.

Order 5
CSI Solicitation 4 Launch — 300 MW New Grid Solar

The BPU launched the fourth CSI solicitation seeking 300 MW of new utility-scale solar generation, including a new Tranche 1A category for large projects over 20 MW. Pre-qualification opened March 11, 2026, with bids due April 24, 2026. Awards expected by June 2026. The CSI program is central to New Jersey’s target of 3,750 MW of new grid solar power by 2026 under the Solar Act of 2021.

What These Orders Actually Mean for Your Electric Bill

Here’s the honest homeowner translation: most of these orders won’t lower your bill anytime soon. The grid batteries take years to build and come online. The utility-scale solar farms take years to permit and construct. The community solar expansion is the only program where ordinary homeowners can see savings in the near term — and only if they subscribe.

The BPU is doing the right things at the grid level. But the timeline between “the BPU awarded a contract” and “your PSE&G bill goes down” is measured in years, not months.

📌 Governor Sherrill’s EO #1 also directed the BPU to freeze utility rate hikes and deliver residential bill credits by July 1, 2026 using Regional Greenhouse Gas Initiative funds and solar alternative compliance payments. These credits will be distributed to ratepayers automatically — watch your utility bill in Q3 2026 for a one-time credit. This is separate from the March 4th orders.

Community Solar vs Rooftop Solar — Which Is Right for You?

The 3,000 MW community solar expansion is genuinely good news — especially for renters, apartment dwellers, and homeowners with heavily shaded roofs who can’t install rooftop solar. A guaranteed 20% bill discount with zero installation required is real value.

But if you own your home and have a decent roof, community solar is the lesser option. Here’s the honest comparison:

Community Solar (20% Discount)

  • No installation required
  • Available to renters and shaded roofs
  • Guaranteed 20% bill discount
  • No upfront cost or commitment
  • You’re renting someone else’s solar power
  • No SuSI TREC income
  • No property value increase
  • Discount rate set by BPU — can change

Rooftop Solar via Solar by Omar

  • $0 down on a lease/PPA
  • 50–100% of your bill eliminated
  • NJ SuSI TREC income — $815+/year for 15 years
  • Fixed rate for 25 years — immune to future hikes
  • PSE&G 1:1 net metering credits
  • Property value increases 3–4%
  • NJ property tax exemption
  • You own or control your own energy

⚠️ If You Own Your Home and Have a Good Roof — Don’t Settle for 20%

Community solar is the right call for renters and heavily shaded properties. For homeowners with viable roofs, subscribing to community solar at a 20% discount while ignoring rooftop solar is leaving real money on the table.

A properly sized NJ rooftop solar system through Solar by Omar typically eliminates 50–100% of your monthly utility bill — not just 20%. Plus you earn SuSI TREC income, lock in a fixed rate against future PSE&G increases, and add measurable equity to your home. The math isn’t close.

The one thing to check: your roof. If it’s heavily shaded by trees or neighboring buildings, or if it needs replacement in the next few years, community solar may genuinely be the better fit. Check if your NJ roof qualifies for solar here.

Find Out If Your Home Qualifies for More Than 20%

Omar checks your roof, your utility grid status, and your bill — and tells you honestly whether rooftop solar beats community solar for your specific situation.

⚡ Get My Free NJ Solar Analysis

The Grid Battery Story — What 1,000 MW of Storage Means for NJ

The 355 MW awarded in Tranche 1, combined with the 645 MW to be awarded in Tranche 2, will give New Jersey a full gigawatt of transmission-scale battery storage — the amount required by state law. Two of the three Tranche 1 projects are in North Jersey: Jupiter Power’s Woods Landing project in Sayreville (200 MW) and Elevate Renewables’ Garden State Reliability Project in Bergen County (150 MW).

What do these batteries actually do? They store electricity when the grid has excess supply — typically overnight or on windy days — and release it during peak demand periods, like summer afternoons when every air conditioner in New Jersey is running simultaneously. By providing on-demand backup power at those peak moments, they reduce the need for expensive “peaker plants” to fire up, which directly moderates wholesale electricity prices.

The BPU projects these projects will save ratepayers more than $169 million over the life of the program. That’s real money — but spread across 4+ million New Jersey ratepayers over many years, it translates to a few dollars per month per household at best. It’s a meaningful grid investment, not a bill-elimination tool.

Don’t Wait on the Grid — Build Your Own Energy Independence

The grid batteries won’t be online for several years. The community solar projects take time to build and subscribe. Meanwhile, you’re paying today’s PSE&G, JCP&L, or Atlantic City Electric rates every month.

The fastest path to energy independence isn’t waiting for the state to fix the grid — it’s installing your own power generation on your roof and optionally adding a home battery like a Tesla Powerwall 3 to create your own micro-grid. When the neighborhood loses power during a summer peak event, your lights stay on, your food stays cold, and your solar panels keep charging your battery.

The March Orders and the SuSI Program — What You Need to Know

One thing the March 4th orders did not do: change the NJ SuSI TREC program for residential rooftop solar. The $85.90/MWh rate for 15 years remains fully intact. The SuSI program is the most direct financial incentive available to NJ homeowners going solar in 2026 — and it was untouched by these orders.

What the community solar expansion order did change is the incentive rate for community solar projects — reduced from $80/MWh to $60/MWh. This makes rooftop solar relatively more attractive compared to community solar from a developer economics standpoint, which means more rooftop solar capacity available to NJ homeowners going forward.

💡 SuSI capacity blocks: The SuSI TREC program operates in capacity blocks — the current $85.90/MWh rate is guaranteed for the full 15-year term for systems registered in the current block. When a block fills, the next block opens at a potentially different rate. The March 4th orders don’t affect SuSI directly, but homeowners who register now lock in the current rate regardless of what future blocks pay. Learn more about the NJ SuSI program here.

Frequently Asked Questions — NJ BPU March 2026 Orders

Five major orders: (1) a 3,000 MW expansion of the Community Solar program with 20% minimum bill discounts; (2) 355 MW of grid battery storage awards under the GSESP; (3) launch of a second GSESP tranche seeking 645 MW more storage; (4) awards from the third CSI utility-scale solar solicitation; and (5) launch of the fourth CSI solicitation seeking 300 MW of new grid solar. Collectively these are the largest single-day energy actions in New Jersey history.
Not immediately for most homeowners. The grid batteries take years to build and come online. The utility-scale solar farms similarly take years. The fastest near-term relief is either subscribing to community solar (20% bill discount) or installing rooftop solar (50–100% bill reduction). Governor Sherrill’s separate EO #1 directed the BPU to deliver residential bill credits by July 1, 2026 using existing funds — those credits will appear automatically on your utility bill.
Community solar lets you subscribe to a share of a large solar farm — often located on a landfill or unused land — and receive a credit on your utility bill for the energy it produces. You don’t need to install anything on your own roof. Under the March 2026 expansion, all subscribers receive at least a 20% bill discount. Community solar is best for renters, apartment dwellers, and homeowners with shaded or unsuitable roofs. Homeowners with viable roofs typically save significantly more with rooftop solar. Visit the NJ BPU Community Solar page at nj.gov/bpu to find registered projects in your area.
If you own your home and have a roof with good sun exposure, rooftop solar is almost always the better financial decision. Community solar provides a 20% bill discount with no installation required. Rooftop solar typically eliminates 50–100% of your bill, generates NJ SuSI TREC income ($815+/year for 15 years), locks in your rate against future utility increases, and adds property value. Community solar is the right choice for renters or heavily shaded properties. For qualifying homeowners, the math strongly favors going rooftop.
No — the March 4th orders did not change the NJ SuSI (Successor Solar Incentive) program for residential rooftop solar. The $85.90/MWh TREC rate for 15 years remains fully intact. The community solar incentive rate was reduced from $80 to $60/MWh for community solar project developers — but residential rooftop solar homeowners are unaffected.
The GSESP is New Jersey’s program to build large-scale, transmission-connected battery storage facilities. These aren’t home batteries — they’re utility-scale projects of 5 MW or larger that connect directly to the PJM grid. They store excess electricity when supply is high and release it during peak demand, moderating wholesale prices and reducing strain on aging power plants. The three Tranche 1 projects totaling 355 MW are expected to save NJ ratepayers over $169 million over their lifetimes.

The State Is Fixing the Grid. You Can Fix Your Bill Today.

The BPU’s orders are good long-term policy. But they won’t lower your PSE&G, JCP&L, or Atlantic City Electric bill this summer. Solar by Omar can. Get a free analysis showing exactly how much rooftop solar saves your specific home — compared to waiting on the state.

⚡ Get My Free NJ Solar Savings Analysis
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