Saying the state needs a long-term energy plan, Democrats in
the state Legislature are proposing to expand utilities' use of renewable energy to supply power to their customers.
The bill being unveiled this week would increase the state's renewable energy target to 30% by
2030.
Wisconsin utilities have already essentially complied with
the 2015 mandate, which requires that 10% of the state's electricity come from
renewable sources that year.
Lawmakers on a conference call with reporters said Wednesday
they they realize their bill won't get traction this year, but that this is the
right time for a discussion of a long-term energy plan, as the federal
Environmental Protection Agency is developing plans to regulate greenhouse
gas emissions from coal-fired power
plants.
The bill, yet to be introduced, would also for the first
time create a requirement that Wisconsin utilities buy a certain amount of
power from waste-to-energy digester projects that process food industry waste
and cow manure into energy.
Utilities are charging farmers more to buy power from manure
digesters in recent years, a trend that could prompt digesters to shut down and
the state to lose
its top ranking nationally in construction of these energy projects,
said Melissa Van Ornum of digester manufacturer DVO in Chilton.
They also said Wisconsin has lost out on investment opportunities
and jobs by not moving more aggressively to infuse more renewables into the
state power mix.
"This bill puts our state back in the game with a
strong renewable energy policy," said Rep. Katrina Shankland, D-Stevens
Point.
"It’s good public policy because Wisconsin in
particular has no fuels of its own, so we are putting billions of dollars sent
to other states in order to be able to generate our current electricity,” said
Sen. Mark Miller, D-Monona.
Miller said the bill won't get any traction in the
Republican-controlled Legislature but said it's time for politicians to be
discussing long-range energy policy ahead of the November elections.
Legislative Republicans have also unveiled proposals on
renewables in this session, with Sen. Glenn Grothman (R-West
Bend) proposing to freeze the renewable mandate at 2010 levels and Rep.
Andre Jacque (R-De Pere) proposing to allow nuclear
power to qualify as a renewable resource.
Business groups including the Wisconsin Manufacturers
and Commerce, Wisconsin Paper Council and Wisconsin Industrial Energy
Group issued statements criticizing the proposed
legislation, saying it would drive up costs for utility customers.
“Wisconsin already has among the highest energy rates in the
Midwest,” said Jeff Landin, president of the paper council. “These extremely
expensive energy mandates would only serve to drive these rates even higher,
thus jeopardizing our competitiveness and stifling our job creation efforts.”
"The proposed legislation recycles Gov. Doyle's global
warming task force package,” said Todd Stuart, executive director of WIEG, in
the statement. “Forcing additional capital expenditures with these mandates
would drive rates higher and harm Wisconsin’s economic competitiveness.”
But states that have more aggressive renewable targets have
lower rates than Wisconsin, said Shankland, adding Wisconsin is losing out on
economic development from clean energy sources as developers build wind farms
in those states.
"We've seen the jobs and the cost benefits of wind as
hugely beneficial to the states that have embraced wind, and we’re seeing now
that the utility sector particularly is embracing ... wind energy as an
extremely valuable hedge as they plan their future resource mix,"
said Paul White, president of Minnesota-based Project Resources Corp., a
developer of wind and solar projects.
Bill Skewes, who leads the Wisconsin Utilities Association,
said his members are also concerned about the compliance costs linked with the
proposal.
"Wisconsin is ahead of schedule to get 10% of our
energy from renewables by 2015 so our current RPS is working well," he
said. "Increasing it to 30% would require building more infrastructure
than we currently need to meet electric demand, putting upward pressure on
electric rates at a time our economy is trying to recover."
Tyler Huebner, executive director of the advocacy group
Renew Wisconsin, welcomed the bill, including its proposals that encourage more
develompent of small-scale distributed generation projects.
"Wisconsin was one of the first states to pass
a renewable energy standard like this back in 2006, but now we’re quite a
ways behind our neighbors, and the gap is certain to widen unless we
pursue and pass worthy legislation like the Wisconsin Renewable Energy
Act,” Huebner said. “It’s time to put renewables back to work in
Wisconsin."
Renewable Energy is often seen as chance, for instance to solve global environmental problems, to strengthen regional economies, to cope communal budget crises or as vehicle for new.
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