by The Editorial Board
At long last, the Koch
brothers and their conservative allies in state government have found a new tax
they can support. Naturally it’s a tax on something the country needs: solar
energy panels.
For the last few months, the
Kochs and other big polluters have been spending heavily to fight incentives
for renewable energy, which have been adopted by most states. They particularly
dislike state laws that allow homeowners with solar panels to sell power they
don’t need back to electric utilities. So they’ve been pushing legislatures to
impose a surtax on this increasingly popular practice, hoping to make
installing solar panels on houses less attractive.
Oklahoma lawmakers recently approved
such a surcharge at the behest of the American Legislative Exchange
Council, the conservative group that often dictates bills to Republican
statehouses and receives financing from the utility industry and fossil-fuel
producers, including the Kochs. As The Los Angeles Times reported recently,
the Kochs and ALEC have made similar efforts in other states, though they were
beaten back by solar advocates in Kansas and the surtax was reduced to $5 a
month in Arizona.
But the Big Carbon advocates
aren’t giving up. The same group is trying to repeal or freeze Ohio’s
requirement that 12.5 percent of the state’s electric power come from
renewable sources like solar and wind by 2025. Twenty-nine states have
established similar standards that call for 10 percent or more in renewable
power. These states can now anticipate well-financed campaigns to eliminate
these targets or scale them back.
The coal producers’
motivation is clear: They see solar and wind energy as a long-term threat to
their businesses. That might seem distant at the moment, when nearly 40 percent
of the nation’s electricity is still generated by coal, and when less than 1
percent of power customers have solar arrays. (It is slightly higher in
California and Hawaii.) But given new regulations on power-plant emissions of
mercury and other pollutants, and the urgent need to reduce global warming
emissions, the future clearly lies with renewable energy. In 2013, 29
percent of newly installed generation capacity came from solar, compared
with 10 percent in 2012.
Renewables are good for
economic as well as environmental reasons, as most states know. (More than
143,000 now work in the solar industry.) Currently, 43 states require
utilities to buy excess power generated by consumers with solar arrays. This
practice, known as net metering, essentially runs electric meters backward when
power flows from rooftop solar panels into the grid, giving consumers a credit
for the power they generate but don’t use.
The utilities hate this
requirement, for obvious reasons. A report
by the Edison Electric Institute, the lobbying arm of the power industry,
says this kind of law will put “a squeeze on profitability,” and warns that if
state incentives are not rolled back, “it may be too late to repair the utility
business model.”
Since that’s an
unsympathetic argument, the utilities have devised another: Solar expansion,
they claim, will actually hurt consumers. The Arizona Public Service Company,
the state’s largest utility, funneled
large sums through a Koch operative to a nonprofit group that ran an ad claiming
net metering would hurt older people on fixed incomes by raising electric
rates. The ad tried to link the requirement to President Obama. Another
Koch ad likens the renewable-energy requirement to health care reform,
the ultimate insult in that world. “Like Obamacare, it’s another government
mandate we can’t afford,” the narrator says.
That line might appeal to
Tea Partiers, but it’s deliberately misleading. This campaign is really about the
profits of Koch Carbon and the utilities, which to its organizers is much more
important than clean air and the consequences of climate change.
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