Author Archives Laura Arnold

Iowa 3rd-party solar PV PPA court decision has implications for Indiana and other states with electric utility monopolies

Posted by Laura Arnold  /   June 30, 2013  /   Posted in Uncategorized  /   No Comments
To help to understand the impact of the Iowa court decision described below, please see this graphic from the DSIRE website. http://www.dsireusa.org/documents/summarymaps/3rd_Party_PPA_map.pdf
Download HERE >DSIREUSA_3rd_Party_PPA_map
What this map shows is that at least 22 states plus Washington, D.C. and Puerto Rico authorize or allow 3rd-Party Solar PV Purchase Power Agreements (PPAs). This graphic indicates Indiana's status is unclear or unknown. Indiana's neighboring states of Ohio, Michigan and Illinois authorize or allow 3rd-party solar PV PPa's as follows:
  • Ohio: PUC Order 06-653-EL-ORD;
  • Michigan: 2008 Public Act 286; PSC Order Docket U-15787; and
  • Illinois: 220 ILCS 5/16-102; 83 Ill. Adm. Code, Part 465
The DSIRE website indicates that 3rd-party solar PV PPA's are apparently disallowed or restricted by legal barriers in Kentucky. Furthermore, this explanation is given.
 Authorization for 3rd -party solar PV PPAs usually lies in the definition of a “utility” in state statutes, regulations or case law; in state regulatory commission decisions or orders; and/or in rules and guidelines for state incentive programs.
There is a recent court case in Indiana that I am told by an experienced utility lawyer that may lend legal support to establish the authority for 3rd-party solar PPA's in Indiana.
If you are interested in helping IndianaDG to establish the legal authority for 3rd-party solar PV PPA's in Indiana, contact me at Laura.Arnold@IndianaDG.net or (317) 635-1701.
Laura Ann Arnold
WSJ: Solar Energy Spurs a Power Struggle
By RYAN TRACY
Updated June 23, 2013, 9:05 p.m. ET
Disputes over the use of small-scale solar power are flaring across the nation, with utilities squaring off against solar-energy marketers over rules for the growing technology.Until now, the fights have been mainly before state regulators. In California, Louisiana and Virginia, utilities have sought to cut what they claim are unfairly high payments they are required to make to owners of homes or larger buildings with solar systems.

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At issue in an Iowa lawsuit is whether solar-system marketers can sell electricity in territories where local utilities have exclusive rights to customers. Such an arrangement isn't allowed or is under dispute in many states, limiting solar firms to sales of panels to homeowners and businesses.

But if they win in Iowa, it could pave the way for fledgling solar industries to expand in other states. The case is being watched closely elsewhere in the Midwest, where policies granting utilities a monopoly on electricity service are one reason a solar-construction boom hasn't occurred, unlike in states such as California and New Jersey.

Utilities "are proponents of renewable energy," said Barry Shear, president of Iowa's Eagle Point Solar LLC, but only "if they own the energy assets and the electrons flow through their grid and they can bill you."

In March, an Iowa District Court judge said Mr. Shear's 18-employee company could sign power-purchase contracts in the Dubuque territory of Alliant Energy Corp.,LNT +0.90% one of the state's largest utilities. Under the disputed deal, Eagle Point would own solar panels on the roof of a Dubuque municipal building and sell power to the city at a rate similar to Alliant's.

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Mark Hirsch for The Wall Street Journal. Barry Shear is president of Eagle Point Solar, which is in a court battle over its power-purchase contracts in the Dubuque, Iowa, territory.

The disputed Dubuque deal employed a "third party" ownership arrangement, in which a rooftop solar system is owned by someone other than the property owner. Solar deals using that structure are growing in popularity—for both residential and commercial properties—because they allow building landlords or homeowners to tap into solar power without a significant upfront investment.

Judge Carla T. Schemmel, overturning an Iowa Utilities Board decision, said Eagle Point could sell solar electricity to the city without encroaching on a utility's lawful turf. She noted that the city would still need to buy electricity from Alliant when the sun isn't shining. "Eagle Point is neither attempting to replace [the utility nor] sever the link between [the utility] and the city," she wrote. "It is simply allowing the city to decrease its demand for electricity from the grid."

Alliant says the ruling contradicts Iowa's policy of not allowing competition for electricity service. "They were going to be selling energy to one of our customers," said Kim King, manager of the renewable-energy program at Alliant, in an interview.

The ruling was a defeat for Berkshire Hathaway Inc.'s BRKB -0.96% MidAmerican Energy Co. unit as well. MidAmerican, another Iowa utility that had sided with Alliant in the case, told the judge in January that if the utilities lost, it could lead to "a proliferation of solar installation in the state."

Alliant and MidAmerican are appealing to the state Supreme Court. They say their problem isn't with solar plants—each utility already connects to about 100 small-scale renewable-energy systems. Instead, they say they have a problem with the way the deal between Eagle Point and Dubuque was arranged. "This is not a dispute about solar energy. This is about a disagreement in the requirements under Iowa law," said Tina Potthoff, a MidAmerican spokeswoman, in an email.

MidAmerican said in May that it may be capable of generating about 39% of its electricity from wind farms by 2016, making it one of several utilities with large renewable-energy portfolios.

But many of those same utilities have objected to policies they say are too friendly to small-scale renewable-energy generation. NextEra Energy Inc. NEE +1.32% says it generates more electricity from the wind and sun than any other U.S. company. But its Florida Power & Light unit opposes allowing solar-system marketers to sell electricity to the unit's Florida customers. An spokesman for FP&L said the utility doesn't oppose solar, but Florida law doesn't allow "third party" sales.

Meanwhile, third-party arrangements such as the one used in Dubuque, are especially appealing to cities, universities and other institutions that don't have tax bills, and therefore can't claim a federal tax credit available to the owners of a solar system. At least 22 states allow third-party solar contracts that are tied to electricity rates, according to the U.S. Department of Energy.

In Wisconsin, the question of whether solar-panel marketers can sell power in another utility's service territory is likely to be tested this year, said Michael Vickerman, program and policy director for Renew Wisconsin, a group with solar-industry members that advocates use of solar power in that state. "If the utility objects, we may go down the same route that we saw in Iowa," he said.

Write to Ryan Tracy at ryan.tracy@dowjones.com

A version of this article appeared June 24, 2013, on page A3 in the U.S. edition of The Wall Street Journal, with the headline: Solar Firms, Utilities in New Power Struggle.

Court sides with Iowa solar installer in dispute with utility

Posted on  by 

dubuque solar

Solar panels installed by Eagle Point Solar atop Dubuque’s municipal building. (Photo courtesy Eagle Point Solar)

Editor’s note: This story was updated to include a response from Alliant Energy.

An Iowa district court ruling March 29 could be a “landmark decision” for solar development in the state, in Eagle Point Solar President Barry Shear’s words, by allowing the company to sell electricity directly to the Dubuque city government to power the municipal building where the panels are located.

Previously, the Iowa Utility Board had prohibited Eagle Point from selling electricity to Dubuque from the rooftop installation. The utility board ruling came after the local utility, Alliant Energy, had complained to the Dubuque City Council in summer 2011 that the then-in-the-works project violated their exclusive right to provide electricity to the city.

The utility argued that Eagle Point would be acting as a utility and encroaching on Alliant’s monopoly territory by selling electricity from its panels to power the building. The Utility Board agreed with Alliant in a March 2012 ruling.

But the Polk County District Court found that Eagle Point would not be acting as a utility, so the company can sign what is known as a third-party power purchase agreement (PPA) with Dubuque to sell the city electricity from the panels, which are owned by an investor and managed by Eagle Point.

Experts consider the ruling crucial to the development of solar installations on the rooftops or grounds of city buildings, universities, churches, hospitals and other non-profit institutions in Iowa.

That’s because non-profit institutions can’t take advantage of the tax breaks considered key to making solar financially viable for many property owners. However, a for-profit solar developer can install panels on a non-profit institution’s property, reaping the tax benefits and recouping its costs plus a profit by selling electricity directly to the institution.

Supporters of such arrangements stress that the electricity transaction takes place “behind the meter” — the solar company is not sending electricity back to the grid or competing with the utility in selling to other customers.

“Third party PPAs are a legitimate financial structure for selling renewable energy systems to nontaxable entities to monetize the statutory incentive structures available to taxable entities,” said Shear.

“Prior to this decision in Iowa we have not had a legally and economically viable structure to permit municipalities, schools, universities and churches and other nontaxable entities to be able to economically afford renewable energy systems,” he added. “Now that this decision has come down, Eagle Point and other solar installers will be pursuing renewable energy systems for nontaxable entities with great vigor.”

A third party PPA removes the risk and high upfront costs that a non-profit institution would face if they installed the panels themselves. Typically, the non-profit entity buys solar power at an agreed upon price per kilowatt hour when the sun is shining, and they buys the rest of their electricity from the utility.

Legal precedent

The Iowa utility board could appeal to the Iowa State Supreme Court. But if there is no appeal or if the Supreme Court upholds the district court ruling, solar advocates and legal experts say the ruling will set legal precedent in Iowa.

Josh Mandelbaum, a staff attorney in the Environmental Law and Policy Center’s Des Moines office, was a lead attorney for the Solar Coalition, a group of clean energy organizations and solar companies who joined together as intervenors in the utility board case.

He noted that in her ruling, district court judge Carla T. Schemmel specified that while this was a declaratory judgment focused on one case, it has broader significance in terms of what test is used to determine whether an entity is acting as a “public utility” or not.

The ruling emphasized that since there is no state statute defining what it means to sell to the public, the utility board should have relied on a decision in a 1968 Iowa case involving the state commerce commission and a natural gas company. Based on a series of tests outlined in that case and actually drawn from a previous Arizona case involving a natural gas company, the court decided that Eagle Point would not meet the definition of either a “public utility” or an “electric utility.”

Among other things, Schemmel noted, Eagle Point would not be able or required to meet all requests for service and it would not be competing with Alliant or creating a monopoly of its own.

Schemmel also pointed out that the solar panels would not meet all of the building’s electricity needs, hence the building would still be hooked up to the grid and buying electricity from Alliant. The building’s demand for electricity from the grid would be reduced, but this would be equivalent to the demand reduction created by energy efficiency measures like weatherization, Schemmel found.

“The judge said the utility board didn’t apply the right test to determine whether a third party PPA was a public utility,” explained Mandelbaum, referring to the factors outlined in the Iowa State Commerce Commission versus Northern Natural Gas Company case cited in the ruling. “When you apply the right standard, it means the third party PPA is not a public utility. So if you have any similar set of facts with a third party PPA, you would end up with the same conclusion. This precedent is really important.”

Alliant Energy spokesman Justin Foss said the company still opposes Eagle Point’s being able to act as a third party PPA, and the company is considering the implications of the ruling and its legal options. Foss said the company doesn’t believe the ruling will have any implications beyond Eagle Point.

He also said that while the company wants to “work with our customers” to promote renewable energy, he thinks a proliferation of third party PPA arrangements would threaten the “reliability and safety” of the grid because it might reduce demand from utilities enough that less infrastructure would be built.

Wider implications

After the court ruling the California non-profit clean energy group Vote Solar declared Iowa the 23rd state to officially allow third party PPAs for solar installations.

The Database of State Incentives for Renewables & Efficiency (DSIRE) maintains a map and database of the complicated mosaic of state laws and policies — or lack thereof — regarding third party PPAs. The utility board ruling placed Iowa among just a handful of states with laws and policies that essentially outlawed third party PPAs, according to DSIRE. Others include Florida, Oklahoma, Georgia, Kentucky and North Carolina.

Other states lack a clear stand on third party PPAs, a negative condition for solar developers because of the uncertainty and the likelihood that utility boards will interpret challenges like the Iowa situation in a utility company’s favor.

Solar advocates hope that the Iowa court decision will influence the ongoing debate over legislation to support third party PPAs in other states including Florida, Washington and Minnesota, where a recently introduced omnibus energy bill would allow third party PPAs.

“This is a very important step forward,” said Nathaniel Baer, energy program director of the Iowa Environmental Council. “If you look at solar development in Iowa it’s been slow for a number of years, but it’s picking up quickly, so this is the perfect time to add a new option to the table. And it’s important when you look at regions that there is consistency (in policy) across states.”

In Wisconsin, legislators and solar advocates are also pushing for legislation that would allow third-party ownership of solar panels in a situation like Eagle Point’s; supporters say such legislation would spur development of solar panels not only at the site of non-profit institutions but also private businesses like department stores.

“I think we’re getting closer to a tipping point on this issue, especially as the solar market matures,” said Chicago-based ELPC staff attorney Brad Klein. “That’s why so many stakeholders on both sides of the issue were watching the Iowa legal proceedings so carefully. You know it’s not a garden-variety case when so many regional and national groups intervene together in an Iowa Utility Board proceeding.”

The ELPC and Iowa Environmental Council are members of RE-AMP, which also publishes Midwest Energy News.

IndyStar: Obama’s emissions plan will impact coal-dependent Indiana; Gov. Pence says it could harm Indiana’s economy

Posted by Laura Arnold  /   June 26, 2013  /   Posted in Uncategorized  /   No Comments

Barack Obama

President Barack Obama speaks about climate change, Tuesday, June 25, 2013, at Georgetown University in Washington. The president is proposing sweeping steps to limit heat-trapping pollution from coal-fired power plants and to boost renewable energy production on federal property, resorting to his executive powers to tackle climate change and sidestepping the partisan gridlock in Congress. / AP

Written by Maureen Groppe, Indianapolis Star Washington Bureau, Jun. 26, 2013

WASHINGTON — President Barack Obama’s plan to combat climate change by limiting carbon pollution from power plants would affect Indiana more than most states — and could harm its manufacturing-heavy economy, says Gov. Mike Pence.

Indiana is a top energy-using state, and most electricity comes from coal-fired power plants, the largest single source of greenhouse gas emissions.

Coal generates about 40 percent of U.S. electricity. But it is the source of more than 80 percent of the ­power in Indiana, where manufacturers are attracted by the state’s relatively low electric rates.

Obama’s proposal to limit emissions was part of a package of initiatives he announced Tuesday to ­address global warming.

“The question is not whether we need to act,” Obama said. “The question now is whether we will have the courage to act before it’s too late.”

Obama directed the Environmental Protection Agency to announce by Sept. 20 how it wants to regulate emissions for new power plants — rules that have been under development since several states and environmental groups successfully sued the EPA to regulate greenhouse gases. The EPA also must propose by next year, and finalize by mid-2015, new rules for existing plants.

Environmental groups said that cutting carbon emissions from power plants is the most important part of the president’s pledge to reduce greenhouse gases.

“The president is stepping up to reduce the climate-disrupting pollution that is threatening our economy and endangering our communities, farms and families with extreme heat, drought and more frequent severe storms,” said Jodi Perras, campaign representative for Indiana Beyond Coal, an effort by the Sierra Club to reduce the number of coal-fired power plants.

But industry groups said the regulations will cause power plants to close, costing jobs and ­affordable power.

“The regulations proposed by the president will invariably raise electricity costs and decrease service quality for major industrial customers, like the steel industry,” said Thomas J. Gibson, president and CEO of the Ameri­can Iron and Steel Institute.

Indiana has long enjoyed some of the nation’s cheapest power rates, a key reason the state is home to many manufacturers, including steelmakers.

Pence said the state’s competitive edge is in jeopardy because the new rules will drive up power costs.

“We will remain dependent upon coal for the major­ity of our electricity for the foreseeable future,” Pence wrote in a letter to Obama last month to object to the pending emission limits for new power plants. “Coal simply provides too great an energy resource for Indiana or the United States to ignore.”

The eight Republicans in the state’s congressional delegation, along with Democratic Sen. Joe Donnelly, wrote a similar letter to Obama this month.

But Jesse Kharbanda, executive director of the Hoosier Environmental Council, said Indiana’s utilities have been developing their business plans around the expectation of emission limits.

“So the emerging EPA policy that is at the heart of the president’s plan shouldn’t really affect what these utilities are already planning to do,” Kharbanda said. “Furthermore, utilities are likely to replace their decades-old coal plants with new natural gas plants, which will be cheaper, on a per unit of energy basis, than new coal plants.”

Ed Simcox, interim president of the Indiana Energy Association, which represents large electric utilities that own coal-fired power plants, said not enough details are available on the proposed regulations to determine the cost they would impose on the state’s power companies. One key detail will be how much time companies have to comply.

“One of the problems that we’ve faced in the past, and that we have sometimes successfully challenged in court, is the deadline,” Simcox said. “Because the industry can get there, but sometimes the time frames are the debatable points. And the time frames have an enormous impact on costs.”

A spokeswoman for Indianapolis Power & Light Co. said many of Obama’s proposed changes are already a priority. The company hopes to generate 57 percent of its power from coal and oil by 2017, compared with 86 percent in 2007. The company is adding new solar generation systems and said it ranks eighth in the nation for the amount of wind generation per customer.

Duke Energy, the state’s largest electric supplier, said in a statement that the company is prepared to work with the EPA and other stakeholders on a “plan for the ­future that will allow us to deliver a secure and reliable supply of electricity at affordable rates and that will not adversely ­impact the economy.”

The Center for Climate and Energy Solutions said states will play a major role in developing the regu­lations for existing power plants. While the EPA will set guidelines for states, states will develop the specific regulations that power plants must follow.

For example, states can follow the EPA’s “model rule” or come up with another way of achieving the same results, such as allowing power plants to trade “emission credits” so the overall emissions level is met even if some plants emit more.

States also might be able to meet emission targets by increasing their use of renewable electricity. Indiana is among the minority of states that does not set rules on how much of the state’s energy must come from renewable sources.

Industry groups say utilities have long relied on coal because it’s been a stable and abundant low-cost source of fuel.

Pence said Indiana’s 300-year supply of coal has enabled the state to offer some of the nation’s lowest electricity rates for years.

Most of the state’s coal has come from the southwestern Indiana district of GOP Rep. Larry Bucshon, who said Obama’s plan amounts to a war on the coal industry.

Although Bucshon believes the earth’s climate is changing, he has said the change has been minimally affected by human activities. In a recent exchange with Energy Secretary Ernest Moniz, Bucshon asked whether the United States should economically disadvantage itself by reducing carbon emissions “when it’s ­pretty clear to me that it’s very unlikely the rest of the world will do what you’re proposing to do.”

Obama said Tuesday that he’s willing to work with Republicans and is open to “maybe better ideas.” But he said he has little patience for those who deny there’s a problem.

“We don’t have time for a meeting of the Flat Earth Society,” Obama said. “Sticking your head in the sand might make you feel safer, but it’s not going to protect you from the coming storm.”

Contact Maureen Groppe at mgroppe@gannett.com or @mgroppe on Twitter.

What does rivalry between AEP and FirstEnergy in Ohio mean for I&M and others?

Posted by Laura Arnold  /   June 26, 2013  /   Posted in Indiana Michigan Power Company (I&M), Uncategorized  /   No Comments

Large industrial customers in Indiana have advocated for customer choice for some time. If there was unfettered customer choice in Indiana, what might that mean for other American Electric Power (AEP) operating subsidiaries like Indiana Michigan Power Company (I&M)? 

This article postulates:

One reason for the tension is that FirstEnergy and other companies are marketing aggressively in AEP territory, putting a squeeze on AEP’s sales. As of March, 49 percent of AEP’s customer base — based on electricity volume, not customer count — had switched to another provider. That figure is nearly double what it was in March of last year.

The industrial customers advocated that Indiana lawmakers study the issue of customer choice during the interim. Senate Enrolled Act (SEA) 560 urges Legislative Council to assign this topic to the Regulatory Flexibility Committee as follows:

SOURCE: ; (13)SE0560.1.7. -->     SECTION 7. [EFFECTIVE JULY 1, 2013]

(a) As used in this SECTION, "electric customer choice program" means a program under which a customer of any class located in the service area of an electric utility may purchase electricity from a provider other than the electric utility in the service area.

(b) As used in this SECTION, "legislative council" refers to the legislative council established by IC 2-5-1.1-1.

(c) As used in this SECTION, "regulatory flexibility committee" refers to the regulatory flexibility committee established under IC 8-1-2.6-4.   

(d) The legislative council is urged to assign to the regulatory flexibility committee the topic of electric customer choice programs.

    (e) If the topic described in subsection (d) is assigned to the regulatory flexibility committee, the regulatory flexibility committee shall issue a final report to the legislative council containing the regulatory flexibility committee's findings and recommendations, including any recommended legislation concerning the topic, in an electronic format under IC 5-14-6 not later than November 1, 2013.

(f) This SECTION expires December 31, 2013.

Although this section of SEA 560 urges the Legislative Council to assign the topic of electric customer choice to the Regulatory Flexibility Committee, Legislative Council at its 5/23/13 meeting did not explicitly assign this topic. See http://www.in.gov/legislative/pdf/LCR13-01_study_committee_topic_assignments.pdf

Apparently there were 140 different requests for study committee requests which were both statutory and from resolutions. Legislative Council, however, decided to only approve 58. They were very astringent and showed a preference for fewer studies. The Regulatory Flexibility Committee is a statutory committee which means that the chairman of the committee could still decide to allow a discussion of electric customer choice.

Watch this website for details or better yet, join IndianaDG Today!

Laura Ann Arnold

AEP wants the Public Utilities Commission of Ohio to force FirstEnergy to stop soliciting customers in AEP’s territory and to surrender the customers it already has in the territory.

Territory dispute latest tussle between AEP, FirstEnergy

By  Dan Gearino

The Columbus Dispatch Wednesday June 26, 2013 3:14 AM

The rivalry between Ohio’s two largest electric companies — American Electric Power and FirstEnergy — has flared this month with a battle before state regulators.

The dispute concerns the rules that must be followed if competitors want to solicit customers in AEP’s territory.

Columbus-based AEP filed paperwork last week asking the Public Utilities Commission of Ohio to force Akron-based FirstEnergy to stop soliciting customers in AEP territory and to surrender the customers it already has in the territory.

AEP took action after FirstEnergy balked at a request to provide the collateral needed to meet AEP’s credit requirements. That amount, whose dollar value has not been disclosed, is designed to cover costs if a supplier, such as FirstEnergy, goes out of business and the local utility, theoretically AEP, needs to step in and provide service.

The amount is based on a formula that includes market share and credit rating.The PUCO likely will take up the matter at its next meeting, on July 2, a spokesman said.

In response, FirstEnergy filed a formal complaint, the equivalent of a civil lawsuit.

“AEP Ohio’s unreasonable credit requirements impose immediate and irreparable harm,” FirstEnergy said in its complaint.

The conflict between the utilities has been simmering, and efforts to resolve it have been unsuccessful.

AEP said in a filing that, “While AEP Ohio made various attempts to informally resolve this issue, both before and during commission-assisted mediation, it is clear that (FirstEnergy) has no intention to provide any collateral.”

FirstEnergy says the rules for doing business in AEP territory make little sense, while AEP says its rival has refused to follow the law.

Both sides have some ammunition in this case, said Paul Ring, editor of Energy Choice Matters, a website that follows the unregulated energy industry.

FirstEnergy “has a legitimate complaint that the credit rules might be onerous, but I wouldn’t say they’re being singled out, and it’s not new to the market,” he said.

Last year, the two companies ran dueling television commercials in an attempt to influence a PUCO decision on an AEP rate proposal. Since then, though, the rivalry has not been nearly as public.

One reason for the tension is that FirstEnergy and other companies are marketing aggressively in AEP territory, putting a squeeze on AEP’s sales. As of March, 49 percent of AEP’s customer base — based on electricity volume, not customer count — had switched to another provider. That figure is nearly double what it was in March of last year.

dgearino@dispatch.com

@dispatchenergy

John Farrell: Obama climate change proposal should focus on local ownership of renewable energy

Posted by Laura Arnold  /   June 25, 2013  /   Posted in Uncategorized  /   No Comments

The One Thing Obama’s Climate Policy Can’t Leave Out

John Farrell 

June 24, 2013  

When President Obama unveils his climate policy proposal in the coming days, he should focus on the one key element of successful climate and energy policy.  It’s not about utilities or incentives or numbers, it’s about ownership.

Climate-protecting energy policy succeeds when communities can keep their energy dollars local by directly owning and profiting from investments in renewable energy.

Look at Denmark, with wind power capacity sufficient for 28 percent of its electricity use.  When the world’s nations descended on Copenhagen in 2009 for the climate conference, attendees could have gleaned their most important lesson by gazing across the water at the Middelgrunden offshore wind farm — 50 percent owned by over 10,000 Copenhagen residents.  Local ownership like this was the centerpiece of building over 4,000 megawatts of wind power in Denmark, increasing energy independence by letting ordinary citizens collectively own wind farms that brought money right back into their community.  Ownership let Danes focus on their own energy independence and economy.  Concern for the climate was secondary.

Andrew Cumbers of the UN Research Institute for Social Development explains the ongoing strength of the Danish commitment to renewable energy:

The participation of communities in the ownership and development of the technology has been a critical factor in the successful growth of renewable energy capacity.  Surveys suggest around 70 percent of the population are in favour of wind farms with only around 5 percent against (Soerensen et al 2003), figures that are far higher than found elsewhere. (emphasis added)

Germany’s roaring success reinforces why ownership should be President Obama’s highest priority.  Over 60 percent of mid-day electricity demand was met with wind and solar on a recent sunny day, and almost 25 percent of annual German electricity usage comes from renewable sources.  Once again, it’s a people-powered transition (or as the Germans like to call it, Energiewende, or “energy change”).

Nearly half of all German renewable energy capacity is owned by individuals, not utilities.  These small, quickly built distributed energy projects multiplied quickly under simply policies that made it easy for Germans to own a share in their energy future.

Despite numerous attempts by various political factions to curtail the renewable energy transition (most frequently citing high costs), Germans remain stolidly committed to growing renewable energy, with over 60 percent willing to pay more to continue its expansion.  A survey of Germans towns suggest that ownership, more than anything else, has built this steadfast political support for a low carbon energy future.

Evidence that ownership holds the key to political success lies closer to home, as well.  After a near-death experience at the polls, Ontario’s Liberal Party revised their renewable energy program to prioritize new wind and solar projects that sport local ownership and public support.  Most U.S. state renewable portfolio standards include language that requires or prefers qualifying projects to be in state,* to link the economic and environmental outcomes.  These statutes have survived an all-out assault by the corporate-funded conservative lobbying group ALEC.  And one should not ignore the power of having the Atlanta Tea Party testifying alongside solar power advocates against monopoly utility Georgia Power, arguing that more people should be able to generate their own energy.

Ownership is good politics not just because of who wins, but how much they win.  A study from the National Renewable Energy Laboratory shows local ownership dramatically multiplies the economic returns of renewable energy for the host community.

No climate proposal from President Obama will sail past Republican opposition (see: Waxman-Markey), but his greatest chance for a climate legacy lies in empowering Americans to take control — with their votes and their dollars — of their own energy future.

Photo credit: Black Rock Solar

*Note: a recent court decision struck down this provision in Michigan, jeopardizing the in-state preference for all states that include this policy.

 

Grist: Obama climate plan finally coming, on Tuesday; Will you watch today at 1:35 pm ET?

Posted by Laura Arnold  /   June 25, 2013  /   Posted in Uncategorized  /   No Comments

Obama climate plan finally coming, on Tuesday

By Lisa Hymas

Barack Obama
The White House
He’s thinking hard about that upcoming speech.

First we heard it from unnamed sources. Then we heard it from White House climate advisor Heather Zichal. And now we’ve heard it from Obama himself: The president is gearing up for a big speech in which he’ll unveil his long-awaited second-term climate plan.

Obama announced the news in his weekly video address on Saturday. “This Tuesday at Georgetown University, I’ll lay out my vision for where I believe we need to go: a national plan to reduce carbon pollution, prepare our country for the impacts of climate change, and lead global efforts to fight it,” he said in the video, which was set to overwrought music and peppered with gauzy scenes of American landscapes. (Watch for yourself below.)

Obama urged people to “share this message with your friends,” and WhiteHouse.gov even provided a handy sample tweet: “Climate change is one of the most serious challenges we face—and it’s time to act. RT this video from the President: http://wh.gov” (What, no hashtag?)

The video didn’t give any specifics about what will be in the plan, bu tZichal and other advisors have suggested the basic outline:

1) Crack down on carbon emissions from power plants. Regulations on new plants are already in the works. The next step is regs on existing power plants, which would gradually force coal-fired plants to start shutting down. Considering that electric power plants produce about a third of U.S. greenhouse gas emissions, this is a big deal.

2) Boost renewable energy development on federal land.

3) Increase the energy efficiency of appliances, industrial equipment, and public and private buildings.

4) Prepare for the climate impacts we’re already seeing.

That’s all stuff Obama can do without approval from Congress, though congressional Republicans will certainly try to throw up roadblocks.

And what won’t be in the plan? Anything about the Keystone XL pipeline. Obama seems intent on kicking that can further down the road.

Obama’s speech is scheduled for 1:35 p.m. ET on Tuesday.

Here’s the the link to the video from Saturday, with a transcript below.

 

In my inaugural address, I pledged that America would respond to the growing threat of climate change for the sake of our children and future generations.

This Tuesday at Georgetown University, I’ll lay out my vision for where I believe we need to go: a national plan to reduce carbon pollution, prepare our country for the impacts of climate change, and lead global efforts to fight it.

This is a serious challenge, but it’s one uniquely suited to America’s strengths. We’ll need scientists to design new fuels, farmers to grow them. We’ll need engineers to devise new sources of energy, and business to make and sell them. We’ll need workers to build the foundation for a clean energy economy. And we’ll need all of our citizens to do our part to preserve God’s creation for future generations — our forests and waterways, our croplands and snowcapped peaks.

There is no single step that can reverse the effects of climate change. But when it comes to the world we leave our children, we owe it to them to do what we can.

So I hope you’ll share this message with your friends — because this is a challenge that affects everyone, and we all have a stake in solving it together.

I hope to see you Tuesday. Thanks.

Lisa Hymas is senior editor at Grist. You can follow her on Twitter andGoogle+.
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