Op-Ed: Advancing Renewable and Alternative Energy in Pennsylvania By Senator Ray Musto
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Dwindling and costly energy supplies have placed a substantial demand on our natural resources and prompted us to explore ways to stretch our current resources to meet our energy needs. Fortunately, there are alternatives. Renewable energy provides about 6 percent of the total energy supply in the Furthermore, the report says that while energy production through wind and solar photovoltaics (solar power) have expanded rapidly in recent years, their share of the total is so small that this growth has not significantly affected the renewable industry. In The bulk of Recognizing that our energy choices have many implications for economic growth, environmental protection and national security, For instance, the use of waste coal is included in the legislation--an alternative energy source that few other states possess. The reuse of this material results in a number of economic and environmental rewards including energy production, elimination of coal refuse piles, and the reclamation of abandoned mine land. The new law divides the alternative energy sources into two tiers. Tier I features sources such as solar energy, wind power, fuel cells, biomass energy (plant materials and animal waste used as fuel), low-impact hydropower, and coal mine methane. In Tier II various alternatives are available including waste coal, distributed generation systems, demand-side management, large-scale hydropower, municipal solid waste, the generation of electricity using wood waste, and coal gasification technology. The new law mandates that within the next two years at least 1.5 percent of the electric energy sold by an electric distribution company or generation supplier to retail customers must be produced by Tier I alternative energy sources. This percentage will increase gradually each year until 2019, when at least 8 percent of the electric energy sold in Pennsylvania is generated by Tier I sources. Within the next 15 years, at least 10 percent of electric energy must be made by Tier II energy sources. The act also provides flexibility in the form of alternative energy credits. The law makes an alternative energy credit tradable. Thus, one credit is equal to one-megawatt hour of electricity from a qualified alternative energy source. And, if an electric distribution company or generation supplier has an abundance of alternative energy, it may bank alternative energy credits produced in one reporting year for compliance in the two subsequent reporting years. If an electric distribution company or generation supplier fails to comply with alternative energy program requirements, it will have to pay a penalty in the form of an alternative compliance payment. The payment will be $45 multiplied by the number of additional alternative energy credits needed to comply. Moreover, if a company does not comply with solar energy requirements, the payment will be 200 percent of the average market value of solar renewable energy credits sold during the reporting period. The compliance payments are to be paid into By advancing the use of renewable and alternative energy,
Senator Raphael Musto is Democratic Chairman of the Senate Environmental Resources and Energy Committee and represents the 14th |
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12/17/2004 |
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