California Governor Arnold Schwarzenegger signed legislation Sunday that will create a European-style above-market tariff, called a feed-in tariff, for small solar-panel generators.

California's abundant sunshine, relatively high utility rates and solar subsidies have already made the state one of the world's top solar markets. The measure seeks to expand the market by requiring California utilities to buy power from solar-panel generators of up to 3.0 megawatts in size, at set rates above what the utilities would pay for wholesale power from conventional sources.

Utilities would have to purchase a certain amount of solar power from customers using the feed-in tariff until a statewide total of 750 megawatts was reached. They could count the purchases toward a state requirement that they use renewable sources for a third of the power they sell by 2020.

California's renewable-energy mandate is a key component of the state's 2006 law to combat climate change.

Some solar companies said the bill's pricing scheme would create a feed-in tariff of about 15 to 17 cents a kilowatt-hour, which they said wouldn't be high enough to spur significant investment. But others said the program would create opportunities for lower-cost projects for which there isn't currently a market.

Supporters of the legislation, including the California Solar Energy Industries Association, said the bill's feed-in tariff will be high enough for schools, local governments, farms, warehouses and other low-cost property owners to take advantage of it.

Suntech Power Holdings Co. Ltd. (STP), SunPower Corp. (SPWRA), Applied Materials Inc. (AMAT) and other companies have pointed to a separate effort at the California Public Utilities Commission to establish a feed-in tariff-type program as more viable.

The CPUC staff has proposed requiring the state's three large utilities, owned by PG&E Corp. (PCG), Edison International (EIX) and Sempra Energy (SRE), to collectively buy 1,000 megawatts of power from solar-panel generators sized between 1 MW and 20 MW over four years through "reverse auctions" in which they would pick the projects with the lowest bids to meet their requirements. The agency is still reviewing proposals for the program and could make a decision sometime next year.

In a letter to the state Senate on Sunday, Governor Schwarzenegger said he was signing the bill because the state "will need to use all of the tools available" to meet its goal of using renewable sources for a third of electricity sold by utilities by 2020.

The CPUC should proceed with its own feed-in tariff program, he said.

Pacific Gas & Electric Co., Southern California Edison and San Diego Gas & Electric are required to tap renewable sources for a fifth of their retail power by next year. All California utilities will have to use renewables for a third of the power they sell by 2020 under an executive order Schwarzenegger signed last month. A pair of bills passed by the legislature last month also would require the state's utilities to use renewables for a third of their retail power by 2020. Schwarzenegger has said he plans to veto one of the bills because it would limit out-of-state purchases.

-By Cassandra Sweet, Dow Jones Newswires; 415-269-4446; cassandra.sweet@dowjones.com