Eastern States Resist Paying for Delivery of Midwest Wind Power

Date: 10 Mar 2010 | posted in: Energy, Energy Self Reliant States | 0 Facebooktwitterredditmail

A coalition of utilities have announced their opposition to a series of 765-kilovolt transmission lines, more than double the capacity of the current 345-kilovolt lines. The lines are proposed as a way to send electricity from the Dakotas, Iowa and Minnesota to Chicago and points east. "If Iowa wants to build a transmission line for their energy, we have no objection. But Iowa or the Midwest should pay for it," said Ian Bowles, secretary of energy and environmental affairs in Massachusetts. New England states want to produce their own wind energy from offshore farms.… Read More

New Wind Data Finds a Windier, More Self-Reliant Midwest

Date: 3 Mar 2010 | posted in: Energy, Energy Self Reliant States, Press Release | 0 Facebooktwitterredditmail

Five Midwest states (Missouri, Illinois, Indiana, Michigan and Ohio) could get nearly all their electricity from wind, according to updated maps from the Institute for Local Self-Reliance (ILSR). New data from Wind Powering America mean that 32 states could get all of their electricity from in-state resources, even more than initially revealed in ILSR’s ground-breaking report last fall, Energy Self-Reliant States. The revised estimates come from the National Renewable Energy Lab’s Wind Powering America project and are the first nationwide update since the early 1990s.… Read More

Listen: John Farrell Explains the Benefits of Decentralized Energy on KBOO

Date: 24 Feb 2010 | posted in: Energy, Energy Self Reliant States, Media Coverage | 0 Facebooktwitterredditmail

The Obama administration’s energy policy jumps the shark: why nuclear isa bad deal and carbon-captured coal is anything but clean.  Senior Research John Farrell discusses this and the smarter strategy of a decentralized renewable energy future with KBOO host Bill Resnick.

The rules we make now will decide our energy future.  Listen to the interview here.

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Britain Moves Feed-in Tariffs to a Whole New Level

Date: 3 Feb 2010 | posted in: Energy, Energy Self Reliant States | 3 Facebooktwitterredditmail

In a truly groundbreaking move for the English-speaking world, Britain’s Department of Energy & Climate Change (DECC) has released a full suite of renewable energy tariffs that go into effect in April.  Britain will become the first country in the world to offer a comprehensive system of tariffs for renewable heat, including tariffs for solar domestic hot water and ground-source heat pumps among others.

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Instead of Cap and Trade, Cap and Dividend

Date: 29 Jan 2010 | posted in: Energy, From the Desk of David Morris, The Public Good | 1 Facebooktwitterredditmail

A new and vastly improved climate change policy has come out of nowhere to capture the imagination of state and national policymakers: "Cap and dividend." It works like this: Step one, impose a carbon cap. Step two, auction off all carbon allowances. Step three, return most of (if not all) the revenues generated to all households on a per capita basis.… Read More

Supreme Court Removes Clean Energy Policy Detour

Date: 26 Jan 2010 | posted in: Energy | 0 Facebooktwitterredditmail

In a largely unheralded move last week, the Supreme Court removed an unnecessary and unpopular detour from the road to a clean energy economy, preserving the right of states to refuse new high voltage transmission lines.   At issue was the right of the federal government to override a state’s veto of a new transmission line.  Electric utilities had appealed the Piedmont Environmental Council’s victory in a lower court decision, but the high court’s refusal to review means that states will retain the authority to refuse new high voltage transmission lines.   … Read More

A New Outside-the-Beltway Climate Bill Deserves Support; Why Won’t Enviros Get Behind It?

Cap and Trade is one approach for limiting our global warming pollution but there is a different climate change proposal in Congress called the CLEAR Act. It’s simple, deserves to be looked at closely and looks to be the start of a winning alternative to the complicated system of cap and trade.… Read More

Report: Electric Vehicle Policy For the Midwest – A Scoping Document

Date: 18 Dec 2009 | posted in: Energy | 0 Facebooktwitterredditmail

This December 2009 report was prepared for the RE-AMP network (120+ organizations in eight Midwestern states). The scoping report outlines and makes recommendations on a variety of policy issues related to expanding electric vehicles. The report illustrates the relationships between electric vehicles and other GHG reduction strategies such as fuel economy standards (CAFE), low carbon fuel standards (LCFS) and efforts to reduce vehicle miles traveled.  Because of their energy storage capability, electrified vehicles will also play an increasingly important role in the expansion of renewable energy and the future elaboration of smart grid technologies.

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Competing visions: an electric grid in need of new lines or dispersed development?

Date: 4 Dec 2009 | posted in: Energy, Energy Self Reliant States | 0 Facebooktwitterredditmail

This is a response to a Renewable Energy Focus article claiming that transmission is at the top of the U.S. renewable energy agenda.

What would transportation advocates say if someone suggested that the solution to traffic congestion in New York City, Chicago, and Los Angeles was the creation of a new interstate superhighway system?  Nonsense!  But that’s exactly what’s happening with proposals for a new, nationwide high-voltage transmission superhighway for renewable energy development. 

Advocates of this new system see grid-constrained renewable energy hot spots and distant big cities and envision an interstate network connecting them.  They see the national natural gas pipeline system and dream of mimicking that system with the same federal preemption and oversight.  But the proposal for a new interstate network of new high voltage lines and the pipeline preemption strategy indicate a myopic view of renewable energy.

Take the supposed limitations on renewable energy development.  In a few areas of the country, renewable energy is facing constraints on the electric grid.  Too many wind projects in a few, remote windy areas have put a stop to development in these areas.  But unlike fossil fuels, renewable energy is everywhere.  A report we recently released at the Institute for Local Self-Reliance –  Energy Self-Reliant States – shows that every U.S. state can reach its renewable goal or mandate and 60 percent of states could get all their electricity using solely in-state renewable resources.  Utility studies of the Minnesota’s lower voltage transmission system found that 600 megawatts of dispersed wind projects could be added with no additional transmission expenditures and that hundreds more megawatts could be added at a fraction of the cost of new high voltage transmission lines.

To put it mildly, the constraints on the transmission system are a matter of perspective.

The transmission advocate vision of the replicating the nation’s natural gas pipeline network in a new transmission superhighway deepens the renewable energy myopia.  At a 2009 national conference on the electric grid hosted by Google in Washington, DC, a representative from the National Association of Regulatory Utility Commissioners (NARUS) illustrates the difficulty of applying the national gas pipeline model to a renewably powered electric grid.

“With gas pipelines we kind of knew where the gas was.  It’s in a few places so to get it from there to the market is a pretty simple exercise.  With renewables you can put it up in a lot of places.  Thousands of places.  And then where exactly do you run the line, it’s like the old question from the 1800s, where do you run the railroad?  If you run the railroads here you get a whole lot going on here and nothing over there because you’re going to run one line.  That’s the difficulty.”

Natural gas pipelines move from Point A (gas field) to Point B (cities) and lent themselves to federal preemptive powers.  But renewable energy has millions of point A’s, making an interstate transmission network a political choice rather than a practical one.  Once again, it’s a matter of perspective.

In a New York Times Op Ed, the Massachusetts Secretary of Energy and Environmental Affairs, Ian Bowles, wrote:

“Lawmakers should resist calls to add an extensive and costly new transmission system that would carry electricity from remote areas like Texas, the Great Plains, and Eastern Canada to places with high energy demands like Boston, Chicago, and New York … Renewable energy resources are found all across the country; they don’t need to be harnessed from just one place.” [emphasis mine]

In May 2009, the governors of 10 East Coast states wrote to senior members of Congress to protest.  Requiring their residents and businesses to pay billions of dollars for new transmission lines that would import electricity from the upper Midwest and Southwest into their region “could jeopardize our states’ efforts to develop wind resources … “  They added, “it is well accepted that local generation is more responsive and effective in solving reliability issues than long distance energy inputs.”

Nine of the 10 Eastern states whose governors signed the May 2009 letter could get over 80 percent of their electricity from in-state renewable resources, according to Energy Self-Reliant States. 

Transmission may have risen to the top of the national renewable energy agenda in the United States, but its priority is a matter of perspective.  Transmission is the only option for expansion if we choose to myopically see renewable energy only in select hot spots.  But the real vision is a vast and dispersed renewable energy resource that can be tapped anywhere.  And enabling the development of that resource everywhere – and the sharing of its attendant economic benefits – should the clear priority.

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