Minnesota Senate begins to recognize the need for affordable energy
A close reading of the omnibus energy bills in the Minnesota House and the Senate reveals that a welcome, albeit slight, policy shift may be underway in the Senate. After years of pursuing energy efficiency and renewable energy at all costs, some lawmakers are finally becoming alert to the importance of keeping energy affordable.
No doubt the current recession and massive budget shortfall has helped remind lawmakers that affordable energy matters. Indeed, keeping energy affordable relieves stress on family budgets, creates jobs and increases Minnesota's global competitiveness.
Unfortunately, this renewed awareness appears limited to the Senate. In fact, on each substantive policy where the House and the Senate bills differ, the House bill risks (or guarantees) higher energy costs.
Where the Senate and House differ
The Senate and House bills differ in at least five key ways.
First, the Senate repeals the moratorium on building a new nuclear energy facility. Now there's no guarantee that nuclear energy will deliver a least-cost solution in the future, but it's certainly possible and even probable if Congress passes an expensive carbon dioxide cap-and-tax program. By repealing the nuclear moratorium, the Senate creates an opportunity for utilities to pursue nuclear if they find that it is an affordable energy alternative.
Opponents of nuclear energy cite safety and storage as continued problems. But it's hard to believe that safety and storage remain serious obstacles when nearly all of Europe is stepping toward nuclear technology. Even Sweden ended its ban on new nuclear facilities this year, leaving Germany as the only European country with a policy to phase out nuclear.
Second, the House increases energy-conservation incentives and makes them mandatory. Right now utilities receive incentives to encourage them to expand their energy conservation programs beyond a baseline required by law. For Xcel Energy — Minnesota's largest utility — these incentives currently equal about $6 million and are capped at $17 million. The House bill slips in a small paragraph that makes this incentive mandatory, removes the cap on the incentive, and requires that the incentive be large enough to make energy conservation more profitable than any other resource choice, such as coal or nuclear.
The incentive necessary to make energy conservation the most profitable resource would be enormous. According to an analysis by the Minnesota Office of Energy Security, Xcel would be eligible for an additional $80 to $275 million incentive annually. To put this in perspective, Xcel will spend about $56 million on conservation in 2009. So, a few extra lines of legislation might expand the cost of the program to customers fivefold. Incredibly, this dramatic expansion was passed by the House without analyzing how much energy the incentive might save.
Third, the Senate limits the amount of solar that can apply to Xcel's 30 percent renewable energy mandate to no more than 1 percent. This provision will mitigate the cost of the renewable energy mandate by protecting customers against the high cost of solar energy.
Fourth, the Senate increases the Public Utility Commission's (PUC) oversight of new renewable energy proposals, while the House reduces oversight. As the PUC's main purpose is to protect utility customers, this oversight is incredibly important to keeping energy affordable. Currently certain wind facilities are exempt from certificate-of-need review by the PUC. The Senate eliminates this exemption; the House broadens it. In addition, another House provision would water down the PUC's responsibility to review the reasonableness and prudence of renewable energy projects, including a project's impact on customers' rates.
Finally, the House bill includes a number of additional provisions that favor high-cost renewables. For instance, the House bill extends renewable energy production incentives another three years, annually allocates $5 million to the University of Minnesota to study renewable energy, and requires utilities to buy 200 megawatts from small renewable energy projects.
Senate bill is not a substantial policy shift
The Senate energy bill is by no means an about face on energy policy. Yes, repealing the nuclear moratorium garnered some headlines, but the moratorium is at odds with nearly the entire developed world. The Senate simply recognizes how far Minnesota's moratorium veers from the norm. (The real headline should be that the House continues to be swayed by environmental extremists.)
The Senate bill mostly reflects a commitment to maintain the status quo as it resists the temptation to pile on more regulations. Considering the status quo — Minnesota already has the most aggressive green energy policy in the country — this bill does not represent a substantial commitment to keeping energy affordable. The Senate just seems to understand that at some point it's time to stop and see how all these green energy policies are working.
Nonetheless, the Senate bill is certainly a step in the right direction and represents a middle ground between the extremist environmental views in the House and more conservative agendas that urge lawmakers to repeal recently enacted green energy regulations.
As the middle ground, Gov. Tim Pawlenty should accept nothing less than the Senate version of the omnibus energy bill. Most important, the governor should veto any bill that fails to repeal the nuclear moratorium or that increases incentives — i.e., subsidies — paid to utilities for energy conservation.
Peter Nelson is an attorney and a policy fellow with the Center of the American Experiment.
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I have reviewed a new book called "Uranium: War, energy, and the rock that shaped the world."
The book concludes with a chapter on the current “Nuclear Renaissance” , where various nations are ramping up nuclear energy after a 25 year hiatus engineered by the carefully generated genocidal anti nuclear hysteria of the 1970's.
The author interviewed the Minister of Electricity in Yemen, a desert country appended to Saudi Arabia, without any oil. He said that “there is not a single city in the developing world that is not trying for a huge increase in nuclear power. There is no doubt, my friend, that the nuclear industry is now living in a renaissance.”
The World Nuclear Association, located in London, claims that the world will build as many as 8000 reactors in the 21st century, up from the current total of 440. There are many new technologies now available, including Thorium and Pebble Bed Reactors, which cannot be used for destructive purposes.
He cites Nancy Pelosi as now willing to include nuclear power in any energy mix. James Lovelock, the famous British “Gaia” scientist, has formed the “Environmentalists for Nuclear Energy”, which says that “opposition to nuclear energy is based on irrational fear fed by Hollywood style fiction, the Green Lobbies, and the media.”
Finally, Manhattan Project scientist George Cowan, made a startling discovery in the French colony uranium mines of Gabon, Africa. French chemists had noticed back in 1972 that the U-235 component of this uranium was less than 0.7 percent, which had appeared to be a natural constant in all uranium rocks. Sandwiched between sandstone and granite, and sloping at enough angle to allow water to drain through the formation, it had formed a “natural” nuclear reaction two billion years ago, and reduced the U-235 content from 3 percent to less than 0.7.
Cowan concluded, “In the design of fission reactors, man was not an innovator, but an unwitting imitator of nature.”