Coal supporters are pushing a
bill that would bar utilities from using the state's abundant wind power to
provide electricity within the state.
Jan 13, 2017
While many U.S. states have
mandates and incentives to get more of their electricity from renewable energy,
Republican legislators in Wyoming are proposing to cut the state off from its
most abundant, clean resource—wind—and ensuring its continued dependence on
coal.
A new measure
submitted to the Wyoming legislature this week would forbid utilities from
providing any electricity to the state that comes from large-scale wind or solar
energy projects by 2019. It's an unprecedented attack on clean
energy in Wyoming, and possibly the nation. And it comes at a time when
such resources are becoming cheaper and increasingly in demand as the world
seeks to transition to clean energy to prevent the worst impacts of climate
change.
The bill's nine sponsors, two
state senators and seven representatives, largely come from Wyoming's top
coal-producing counties and include some
deniers of man-made climate change. They filed the bill on Tuesday, the
first day of the state's 2017 legislative session. Activists and energy experts
are alarmed by the measure, which would levy steep fines on utilities that
continue providing (or provide new) "non-eligible" clean energy for
the state's electricity. But they are skeptical it will get enough support to
become law.
"I haven't seen anything
like this before," Shannon Anderson, director of the local organizing
group Powder River Basin Resource
Council, told InsideClimate News. "This is essentially a reverse
renewable energy standard."
Anderson, who has tracked the
Wyoming legislature's work for a decade, added: "I think there will be a
lot of concerns about its workability and whether this is something the state
needs to do... it seems to be 'talking-point' legislation at this point."
Last year, Republican Gov.
Matt Mead introduced
a new energy plan for the state that involved "doubling down" on coal. But
even this fossil fuel-centric plan included room for the state's renewable resources,
especially wind energy, to grow.
The new bill mandates
utilities to use "eligible resources" to meet 95 percent of the
state's electricity needs in 2018 and then all of its power supply in 2019.
Those sources are defined as coal, hydroelectric, natural gas, net metering
sources (such as rooftop solar or backyard wind projects for homeowners and
small business), nuclear and oil. Using power from utility-scale wind, solar and
other renewable projects would be outlawed under this legislation.
Wyoming generates and consumes
mostly coal-powered electricity. Nearly 90 percent of electricity generated in
the state came from coal in September 2016, the latest month with available
data. Renewables, mainly wind, were the second-biggest source; other small
sources of electricity included petroleum- and natural gas-powered plants and
hydroelectric power.
A big state with vast energy
resources and a small population, Wyoming produces a lot more power than it
needs: It is the nation's largest producer of coal, fourth-largest
natural gas producer and eighth-biggest crude oil producer, according to the U.S.
Energy Information Agency. Wyoming also ranks high in untapped wind
resources, with one of the nation's
largest wind farms under construction. The wind power expected to be
generated at this massive project, however, along with much of the wind power
already being produced in the state, is already destined for out-of-state
markets.
Under this new proposal, power
providers could continue to generate and sell wind to customers outside of
Wyoming without a penalty—but they would be hit with a fee for providing that
same power to in-state residents and businesses. Utilities that fail to meet
the proposed standards would face $10 penalty for each megawatt hour of energy
the utility fails to procure from approved sources and the utility couldn't
recover this penalty by raising customer rates.
Pacific Corp.'s Rocky Mountain Power
and Black Hills Corp.'s Black Hills
Energy are among the utilities operating in Wyoming that could feel the
bill's impact because some of the electricity they provide to the state comes
from clean energy sources now. Spokespeople from both companies told
InsideClimate they are still reviewing the bill and wouldn't comment further.
When asked about the
motivation for the bill and concerns about it driving away future wind
generation, bill sponsor Republican Rep.
David Miller from Fremont County said,
"Wyoming is a great wind
state and we produce a lot of wind energy. We also produce a lot of
conventional energy, many times our needs. The electricity generated by coal is
amongst the least expensive in the country. We want Wyoming residences to
benefit from this inexpensive electrical generation."
"We do not want to be
averaged into the other states that require a certain [percentage] of more
expensive renewable energy," Miller wrote in an email to InsideClimate
News.
(In Wyoming, wind and natural
gas are the cheapest forms of new energy generation, according to Dave
Eskelsen, a spokesman for Rocky Mountain Power.)
Some of the bill's sponsors
are also vocally opposed to climate action and continue to openly question the
scientific consensus on climate
change.
"The controversy of
climate change affects our families in Campbell County," writes state Rep.
Scott Clem on his website.
"Coal=Jobs. The fact of the matter is that man-made climate change is not
settled science. Instead, it is hotly disputed by reputable and educated men
and women...."
Although Republicans outnumber
Democrats 51-9 in the state House and 27-3 in its Senate, Miller, the sponsor,
isn't confident the bill will pass. He estimates its chances are "50
percent or less."
"It's a clear statement
the legislature is supporting the traditional sectors of the economy,"
said Robert Godby,
director of University of Wyoming's Center for Energy Economics and Public
Policy. Regardless of whether this bill passes, he added, "the fact that
it has been run up the flagpole might have some negative consequences."
For example, wind developers may be less interested in operating in the state.
Another recently
proposed state bill seeks to increase the state's tax on wind generation, a
move that could also potentially discourage future wind projects as well.
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