Author Archives Laura Arnold

Indiana Governor Daniels pushed and pushed for clean coal plant

Posted by Laura Arnold  /   May 02, 2011  /   Posted in 2011 Indiana General Assembly, Uncategorized  /   No Comments

Editor's Note: You need to read the next two articles from the Sunday, May 1st NWI Times to get the complete gist of what is going on here with the Indiana Gasification project in Rockport Indiana. Hearings are going on today and later this week on this project before the Indiana Utility Regulatory Commission (IURC) in Cause No. 43976. Is it no surprise that Governor Daniels can't seem to find time to support true renewable energy and distributed generation policies here in Indiana?  Laura Ann Arnold

Original article: http://www.nwitimes.com/business/local/article_49cc116c-d8e9-5b59-8049-621b4848316b.html

By Keith Benman keith.benman@nwi.com, (219) 933-3326 

nwitimes.com | Posted: Sunday, May 1, 2011 12:00 am |

The Daniels administration effort to support the financing for a clean-coal energy plant in southern Indiana has taken more turns than a country road winding into the heart of coal mining country.

Much of the time it has been two steps forward and one step back, as legislation needed to establish the plant was passed, tweaked and sometimes defeated in the General Assembly. There also were years of negotiations with Leucadia National Corp., the New York investment firm behind the project.

"We spent four years working on this deal and we walked away several times trying to make certain we had a really solid deal from the standpoint of the ratepayer as well as the state," said Gov. Mitch Daniels, in a Times interview two weeks ago. "But to tell you the truth, I feel better about it today than I did before."

But where Daniels and his allies see their plan as a valiant effort to provide a market for coal and clean up the environment, opponents see nothing but an attempt to pad the pockets of investors and a key ally of the governor.

"Ratepayers are receiving nothing in this deal other than a charge tacked on their bills that will benefit Leucadia investors," said Kerwin Olson, a utility campaign organizer with the Citizens Action Coalition. "They are using a captive rate base to implement their business plan."

Critics such as Olson are quick to point out the involvement of Mark Lubbers, Daniels' former Statehouse political director, who is working for Leucadia as its Indiana Gasification project manager.

In an interview with The Times, Lubbers said he already had left his Daniels administration post when he was first contacted about the Indiana Gasification project in early 2006. He said his wife, then a state senator, recused herself from voting on Indiana Gasification legislation in 2007 and after.

He responded with outrage to critics' charges he has leveraged his 35-year friendship with Daniels to benefit himself, allies or Leucadia.

 "The people who push this innuendo are sneaky and evil," Lubbers wrote in a follow-up e-mail after the interview. "They lurk around at the edges of good and honest work attempting to damage it by collateral character assassination."

Plan hinges on high natural gas prices

Politics aside, Daniels and other supporters acknowledge the deal is a complex one.

In essence, it has the state's more than 1.7 million utility customers, including those at NIPSCO, paying for losses the Indiana Gasification plant would incur when natural gas prices are low. Conversely, utility customers would get a split of the profits produced when natural gas prices are high.

Natural gas prices were very high when Daniels first announced plans for the plant in October 2006. Natural gas futures were trading around $7.15 per million British thermal units, according to U.S. Energy Information Agency data. Earlier that year, the price had gone as high as $10.63.

Since then, natural gas prices have plummeted. This year, natural gas futures never even approached $5 per million Btus. They currently are trading around $4.20.

Those plummeting prices have significantly changed the profit picture for Indiana Gasification and the state's utility customers. If prices remain that low, the state's utility customers could see regular surcharges on their bills.

The plan's winding road

It is now estimated the plant to be located in Rockport, east of Evansville near the Ohio River, will start production in 2015 if it receives regulatory approval.

When Gov. Daniels first announced plans for the plant in 2006, the state's major natural gas utilities signaled they were ready to buy synthetic natural gas from the plant through 30-year contracts.

Daniels said jobs created by the project would amount to about 1,000 construction jobs, 125 plant-operator jobs and 300 coal mining jobs. The plant is projected to use 3.5 million tons of coal per year.

But in late 2008, the state's major utilities withdrew from the deal, scratching the plan for the plant.

Since then three pieces of legislation have been passed to re-enable the project. Two set up the current plan for having the state's utility customers, including those at NIPSCO, subsidize potential losses. A steady revenue stream must be assured for the plant so Indiana Gasification can obtain a nearly $1.9 billion construction-loan guarantee from the U.S. Department of Energy.

The plan also ran into an obstacle in the Indiana General Assembly earlier this year, when the Senate rejected legislation allowing for construction of a pipeline to carry carbon dioxide produced at the plant to Gulf of Mexico oil drilling operations.

Despite such setbacks, the governor and proponents say they will prevail and the plant will get built.

"I don't think of this as a little regional thing," Daniels said. "We have always thought of this in the context of an overall energy and jobs policy that is about everybody."

Indiana Gasification timeline

The state's support for the Indiana Gasification synthetic natural gas project has traveled a long and twisting road.

Oct. 27, 2006: Gov. Mitch Daniels announces plans for a $1.5 billion coal gasification plant to be operating by 2011. NIPSCO and other utilities sign letters of intent to buy synthetic natural gas from the plant for 30 years. Petition for approval filed with Indiana Utility Regulatory Commission.

Feb. 24, 2007: House Bill 1722 passes in the General Assembly, allowing state's utilities to purchase synthetic natural gas from Indiana Gasification and to fully recover the cost from customers.

March 12, 2008: Gov. Daniels signs Senate Bill 223, expanding definition of synthetic natural gas and enabling utilities to charge customers in "Choice" programs for the gas.

Nov. 25, 2008: Indiana Gasification withdraws its petition for approval with IURC after NIPSCO and other utilities withdraw from negotiations to buy synthetic natural gas.

March 24, 2009: Gov. Daniels signs SB 423, allowing the Indiana Finance Authority to buy synthetic natural gas from Indiana Gasification and recover its costs through the state's utility customers.

July 2009: Indiana Gasification project selected by the U.S. Department of Energy for due diligence on a $1.875 billion loan guarantee.

Early 2010: Legislative amendment allows for a third-party marketer to purchase Indiana Gasification synthetic gas from IFA.

Dec. 16, 2010: IFA votes unanimously to enter into a 30-year contract for purchasing synthetic natural gas from Indiana Gasification. IFA and Indiana Gasification submit petition to IURC for approval.

Feb. 11, 2011: SB 72 allowing for eminent domain for a carbon dioxide pipeline is defeated on Senate floor. Indiana Gasification parent company Leucadia National Corp. says project can't go forward without pipeline.

March 13, 2011: Illinois Gov. Pat Quinn vetoes legislation that would have established a Leucadia coal gasification plant on Southeast Side of Chicago.

April 18 to 25, 2011: IURC holds public hearings on Indiana Gasification proposal in three locations around state.

Yet to come:

May 2, 2011: Evidentiary hearing starts before IURC in Indianapolis.

Sources: NIPSCO testimony in Indiana Gasification case before IURC; NiSource news release Oct. 27, 2007; Governor's office news release Dec. 16, 2010; Indiana Utility Regulatory Commission.

Hoosier Environmental Council’s KHARBANDA: The case for a diverse energy policy in Indiana not SB 251

Posted by Laura Arnold  /   April 24, 2011  /   Posted in 2011 Indiana General Assembly, Uncategorized, Voluntary Clean Energy Portfolio Standard Program  /   No Comments
Editor's Note: This article was written by a spokesperson for a statewide environmental group. It provides yet another perspective on the flaws in SB 251. This article was prepared for the Indianapolis Business Journal (IBJ) before the bill was amended on second reading in the House and before the Voluntary Clean Energy Portfolio Standard language was added to HB 1128. Hopefully, these various perspectives posted to the blog will help readers to decide for themselves whether SB 251 and HB 1128 should become law in the State of Indiana. Laura Ann Arnold
 
 
by Jesse Kharbanda

April 16, 2011
 
Key utility executives and state legislators argue that Indiana’s power should come predominantly from coal and nuclear power.

Kharbanda

Indiana’s electricity sector is at a crossroads. On average, power plants are more than three decades old, with their economics needing reassessment in light of new—and long-delayed—federal environmental rules.

What path will we pursue to power Indiana in the coming decades? Key utility executives and state legislators argue that Indiana’s power should come predominantly from coal and nuclear power. Those legislators made good on that conviction by passing, in recent years, taxpayer- and ratepayer-funded coal incentives considered “the most aggressive” in the United States, and have pushed to advance ratepayer-funded incentives to expand nuclear power, as proposed in the intensely debated Senate Bill 251.

The question is whether this monolithic approach is really in the best long-term economic interest of our state. While coal power will continue to dominate Indiana’s electricity mix, a decidedly more diverse generation mix would maintain reliability and be more affordable and better for economic development.

Natural gas is a logical part of this more diverse vision: According to the Energy Information Administration, the levelized cost of new gas is 40-percent lower than new coal and new nuclear, and its project time line is much shorter. Gas becomes more economically compelling in a world of carbon controls and, in the wake of the Japan tragedy, more robust—and expensive—nuclear reactors and operations.

But the broader opportunity for a more diverse electric-generation vision is in the commercial and small-scale renewable energy sector. Renewables get characterized by skeptics as limited, costly and unreliable. But this description is largely outdated.

Renewable resource potential, driven by technology, has exploded: Indiana’s commercially viable proposed wind projects alone could provide more than five times the power of what those currently installed generate, enough to make up 10 percent of our electricity. And the price of commercial wind has gone down to such a degree that it is 40 percent of the cost of new coal/nuclear on a per-megawatt-hour basis—and cheaper even without federal support.

Commercial wind’s economics have proven to reduce wholesale power prices in parts of the Midwest. And renewable energy resources do not impede reliability, safely contributing to more than 10 percent of the electricity of Iowa, Minnesota and the Dakotas, while being backed by existing generation.

Accelerated renewable-energy development creates an additional dividend: By concentrating construction, robust renewable-energy development will draw in component manufacturers who historically co-locate near such construction, as seen in Iowa and Minnesota. This co-location effect is forecasted to be larger in Indiana than other states due to our impressive automobile-component-manufacturing base, which has strong crossover with renewable-energy-component manufacturing.

Some will pose that, if renewable energy is so attractive, compared to new coal and nuclear, our state should naturally continue to see ample growth of the former. But Indiana’s five main utilities, monopolies by law, have no incentive to invite in renewable-savvy independent power producers, as these utilities reap a rate of return only on their own generation. Indiana, as a result, largely forgoes having a flood of IPPs continually competing to fulfill supply needs and driving down electricity rates.

SB 251 adds another layer of challenge to future competition, as it would expedite—and perhaps streamline—the approval process for recouping retrofitting expenditures for our existing power fleet. While offering a substantial new carrot to existing, coal-dominated generation, SB 251 offers no meaningful incentives to renewable energy. The bill’s voluntary clean-energy portfolio program could likely be met entirely, as of this writing, by energy-efficiency investments already prescribed by the Indiana Utility Regulatory Commission.

We look forward to working with those who would seriously consider the added value of a more diverse energy policy than what current legislation would likely lead to. At stake are Indiana’s long-term cost competitiveness and economic growth.•

__________

Kharbanda is executive director of the Hoosier Environmental Council

CAC: Legislature Votes to Raise Taxes through Utility Bills; House adds eminent domain to bill

Posted by Laura Arnold  /   April 24, 2011  /   Posted in 2011 Indiana General Assembly, Voluntary Clean Energy Portfolio Standard Program  /   No Comments

Editor's Note: Here is another news release  from the consumer perspective on SB 251 and HB 1128 creating a Voluntary Clean Energy Portfolio Standard. This news release is in stark contrast to the news release from the American Wind Energy Association (AWEA). These divergent perspectives are posted here to give readers a flavor for the controversy surrounding this proposed legislation. State legislators have until April 29th to resolve differences in proposed legislation before they adjourn. Laura Ann Arnold

Citizens Action Coalition
NEWS RELEASE
 
For Immediate Release :  April 22, 2011                                                                

Contact: Grant Smith    (317) 442-8802 or Kerwin Olson  (317) 702-0461            
 
 
Once again, utility ratepayers, aka taxpayers, remain invisible to 104 of the 150 elected officials in the Indiana General Assembly.  On Thursday, both Chambers of the General Assembly voted to raise the utility bills of Hoosiers.   Two companion bills being sold to the public under the guise of “clean” energy, SB 251 & HB 1128, were both voted out of their respective chambers in overwhelming fashion. 
 
Kerwin Olson, Program Director at Citizens Action Coalition, said: “It is simply unconscionable to CAC that at a time when vital human services for vulnerable populations are being cut dramatically, 104 elected officials would raise taxes on hard working and struggling Hoosiers.  Let’s not forget, the utility bills of school corporations, municipalities, and other governmental entities are paid by tax dollars.  Rate increases are tax increases in disguise. ”
 
“These investor owned utilities are State franchised monopolies sheltered from risk and market forces,” stated Grant Smith, Executive Director at CAC.  “These monopolies earned over $3B last year in combined earnings.  To reward these corporations with extra profit for doing absolutely nothing is completely disgusting.  It is evident that the public doesn’t stand a chance at the Indiana Statehouse as the influence peddling of special interests lobbyists is clearly running our State.”
 
The intent of SB251 and HB1128 is as follows:
 
1)            To deregulate the revenues of utilities overtime by mandating State regulators rubber stamp their requests for rate increases.
.
2)            To allow utilities to avoid going in for rate cases.  Avoiding rate cases enables overearnings of utilities and conceals their books from public scrutiny.
 
3)            To shift all risk to captive ratepayers by mandating they pay for construction of new power plants before they generate electricity and even if they never produce a single kWh of energy.
 
4)            To create a “voluntary” clean energy standard which is nothing but a fraud and window dressing to grant the monopoly utilities extra profit for doing what they are already doing or planning to do.
 
Adding insult to injury, the House of Representatives added eminent domain for a private corporation, Denbury Resources, to SB251.  “Not only did the monopoly utilities get an undeserved raise, a Texas pipeline company gets to condemn our property. I doubt this is what the voters of Indiana had in mind when they went to the polls last November,” concluded Mr. Olson.
 
Click this link for the House roll call: http://www.in.gov/legislative/bills/2011/PDF/Hrollcal/0622.PDF.pdf
 
Click this link for the Senate roll call: http://www.in.gov/legislative/bills/2011/PDF/Srollcal/0446.PDF.pdf
 
********************************************************************************************
Grant Smith, Executive Director for Citizens Action Coalition: 1-317-442-8802
Kerwin Olson, Program Director for Citizens Action Coalition: 1-317-702-0461

AWEA applauds bipartisan 62-34 vote on amended SB 251

Posted by Laura Arnold  /   April 24, 2011  /   Posted in 2011 Indiana General Assembly, Uncategorized, Voluntary Clean Energy Portfolio Standard Program  /   1 Comments
 
Editor's Note: This news release was posted by Jeff Anthony, AWEA Director of Business Development, to the Wind Energy Manufacturers Association (WEMA) Linked-In Group. I am posting this news release in an effort to indicate that everyone is not on the same page about SB 251 (and HB 1128). What we really need is for all the business organizations supporting renewable energy and distributed generation to work together. This is not happening right now. As a result, I believe that some are willing to settle for the crumbs dropped on the floor under the table plus look the other way on some really bad utility policy in these bills.
 
Tell me what you think? Laura Ann Arnold
 
AWEA: Indiana House passes Clean Energy Portfolio Standard, spurring Hoosier job creation

Washington, DC (April 22, 2011) – The American Wind Energy Association (AWEA) today expressed support for a bill passed by the Indiana House of Representatives containing the state’s first voluntary Clean Energy Portfolio Standard (CPS). The CPS would set a voluntary goal for 10 percent of Indiana's electric generation to come from clean energy resources by 2025.

"I applaud the Indiana House, under the leadership of Speaker Brian Bosma and Representative David Frizzell, for their efforts on SB 251,” said AWEA CEO Denise Bode. “This action is about creating affordable, homegrown energy for Indiana. With SB 251, the Indiana House has set in motion the ability to create thousands of wind industry jobs for Hoosiers—life-long careers in manufacturing, construction, operations and maintenance.”

Included in the voluntary CPS of SB 251 is an amendment offered by Representative Frizzell (R-Indianapolis), ensuring that at least half of the energy produced by Indiana utilities participating in the 10% voluntary CPS will be met with clean energy resources from within Indiana. The amendment passed unanimously by a voice vote on Tuesday, April 21.

The House passed the amended bill with a bipartisan vote of 62-34. The amended bill, which originated in the Senate, now moves back to that chamber for a vote. The Indiana General Assembly must complete this year’s legislative session by April 29.

Johnson Melloh Solutions to give away 2 kW Solar Power System to local organization

Posted by Laura Arnold  /   April 22, 2011  /   Posted in Uncategorized  /   No Comments
Johnson Melloh Solutions, an Indianapolis renewable energy solutions provider, is reaching out to make help make an impact on sustainability in Indiana.  As part of their Earth Month activities, they will be giving away a 2KW Solar PV system to one lucky organization.

The 2 KW Solar PV system will produce electricity from the sun and help to reduce the electric bill for the winning organization.  “We want to give back to our community and help an organization locally to reduce their carbon footprint” said Nick Melloh, President of Johnson Melloh Solutions. “Educating the community of the benefits renewable energy can have in Indiana is a very important mission for our company.”

Johnson Melloh Solutions has partnered with Level Solutions, a provider of “state-of-the-art” renewable energy and HVAC products by Sanyo and other industry leaders, to generously donate the Solar PV system and installation to the winner. “We are proud to be part of such a great event where we can actually make a difference in our community and increase the awareness of the power of renewable energy” adds Steve Little, Vice President Technical Sales of Level Solutions.

The solar giveaway is open to all community members that wish to nominate a local Not-For-Profit, Charity, Church or School. The deadline for online registration is April 27th, 2011. One Grand Prize Winner will be randomly selected from all the eligible entries received and will be announced by Q95 on April 28th, 2011.

Additionally, the individual that nominates the winning organization will receive Indianapolis Indiana Tickets.

To learn more about the solar giveaway, official rules, and to nominate an organization, go to the Solar Contest Page directly or visit johnsonmellohsolutions.com.

About Johnson Melloh Solutions

Johnson Melloh Solutions (JMS) is a family owned Indiana business that provides turnkey installation of renewable energy systems including Wind, Solar PV, Solar Thermal, Hybrid Lighting, Biomass Boilers, and Geothermal.  With a special emphasis on American & Indiana made product and equipment, Johnson Melloh Solutions buys direct and installs their own systems.

JMS is proud to kick off their “Go Green for Less” finance option for consumers that are interested in a renewable energy project, but lack the funding options to get started. With the JMS finance option, Solar PV or Solar Thermal projects include flexible payment options, and as little as 25% down. Learn more about Johnson Melloh Solutions at www.johnsonmellohsolutions.com

About Level Solutions

Level Solutions provides “State-of-the-art” renewable energy and HVAC products by Sanyo and other industry leaders.  Firmly entrenched in cutting-edge technology that is responsible both economically and environmentally, Level Solutions has been involved in many of the areas most significant construction projects, in both HVAC and in lighting. Their lighting divisions, ECO Parking Lights and ECO Lighting Solutions are gaining a strong national reputation for relighting projects that include towns and cities to entire college campuses. Level Solutions and their ECO portfolio of lighting is truly “Green That Makes Cents”! For more information about Level Solutions visit www.level-solutions.com

Johnson Melloh Solutions is a member of Indiana Distributed Energy Advocates (IDEA). 

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