Toledo
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Ohio
renewable energy law in danger
GOP bill would strip ‘green’
requirements from state utilities
By Jim Provance
COLUMBUS
-- Ohio’s mandate that
utilities find a quarter of their power from renewable and advanced
technology
sources by 2025 would become a thing of the past under a bill
introduced this
week.
State
Sen. Kris Jordan (R., Powell)
has proposed stripping the requirement from Ohio’s 2008 rewrite of
energy law.
The bill has two Republican co-sponsors from the Cleveland and
Cincinnati
areas.
“With
one of the worst recessions in
recent memory still fresh in our minds, the last thing we need to do in
Ohio is
drive up the cost of energy for both Ohio families and Ohio businesses,
and
that’s exactly what the Alternative Energy Portfolio Standard does,”
Mr. Jordan
said.
Under
current law, half of the
mandate, 12.5 percent, must come from renewable sources such as wind,
solar,
and landfill gases. The parallel “advanced” source component refers to
such things
as nuclear, fuel cells, and cleaner-coal technology.
Removal
of the mandate could have an
impact on northwest Ohio, where a new solar panel industry has been at
least
partly banking on the generation of an internal market for its product.
Solar
was the only source of renewable power to receive a special carve-out
in the
bill, requiring that at least half a percentage point of the renewable
standard
must come from power generated by solar panels.
Most
of the electricity used in Ohio
comes from coal.
“I
think it is Neanderthal thinking,
quite frankly, to try to turn back the clock on something that’s having
a very
positive impact on Ohio’s economy right now,” former Gov. Ted
Strickland said.
“Investments are being made. Jobs are being created. This [bill] is
almost
irrational in my judgment.”
Ohio
Sen. Kris Jordan (R., Powell)
Ohio Sen. Kris Jordan (R., Powell) Enlarge
The
fate of Ohio’s energy law has been
a question mark since last year’s gubernatorial election. Mr.
Strickland, a
Democrat, considered it one of his most significant accomplishments in
office,
citing the development of solar research and related businesses in the
Toledo
area as well as promises of development of solar panel fields, wind
farms, and
garbage-fueled steam plants, some of which have become or are becoming
reality.
Republican
Gov. John Kasich generally
voiced support for the standards during the campaign while also raising
concerns that they would increase energy costs. The current law
contains a
provision that caps any increased costs tied to the alternative energy
standards at 3 percent.
Spokesman
Rob Nichols declined to
comment directly on Senate Bill 216.
“The
governor does not oppose the
renewable standards, but he believes we need to think globally and in a
comprehensive way about how we use energy policy to create jobs in this
state
so that we have clean, affordable, and reliable energy sources for
industry,”
he said.
Mr.
Kasich will host an energy summit
Sept. 21 and 22 at Ohio State University. The agenda includes a
spectrum of
issues, including the role of wind, solar, and coal-generated power.
Everything
is on the table for discussion, including the renewable standards.
“Ohio
is the second-largest solar
manufacturer in North America, due to the very law that Senator Jordan
wants to
repeal,” said Brian Kaiser of the Ohio Environmental Council. “His
decision to
attack one of the few parts of Ohio’s economy that is working is a
direct
assault on all Ohioans who care about job growth and the environment.”
Mr.
Jordan suggested the focus on
“green energy” jobs has been misplaced. “Studies show that in countries
such as
Spain, similar efforts have led to the destruction of 2.2 jobs in other
sectors
for every one of these ‘green jobs’ created,” he said. “Ohioans deserve
our
best efforts to lower energy costs for all consumers, and a positive
environment for job creators to move Ohio’s economy forward, and this
bill does
just that.”
Read
it at the Toledo Blade
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