PennFuture: Lawmakers Move Bill To Require Clean Solar Energy Facilities To Have Bonds; But Fail To Have Adequate Plugging Bonds For Dirty Oil & Gas Wells Leaving Taxpayers To Pick Up The Cost
Photo

In reaction to the House Environmental Resources and Energy Committee moving Senate Bill 211 (Yaw-R-Lycoming) requiring bonding for solar energy facilities [Read more here], Pennfuture issued this statement--

With Senate Bill 211, lawmakers target a real, cost-effective climate solution that will ultimately hurt Pennsylvania farmers and ratepayers.

Lawmakers in Harrisburg are using a new tactic to hinder solar development in Pennsylvania. They want to impose higher standards on solar energy generation compared to other energy industries and land use development projects.

Senate Bill 211 targets the rapidly growing solar energy industry with unfair bonding and decommissioning requirements. These inequities will make it increasingly difficult to build solar projects.

By imposing restrictions on solar energy, Pennsylvania legislators are limiting economic opportunities for farmers who could otherwise lease their land to host solar panels, thus making it feasible to farm and stay in business.

These restrictions infringe on their property rights and prevent them from making choices that benefit their families.

It also leads to farmland being developed in ways that ensure it will never become agricultural land again.

Failing To Adequately Bond Oil & Gas Wells

Senate Bill 211 is in direct contrast to Act 96 of 2022 which removed the Pennsylvania Environmental Quality Board authority to adjust well bonding amounts for the conventional oil and gas industry and capped the amount for conventional wells at just $2,500 per well, or $25,000 for all of an operator’s wells.

For perspective, the Pennsylvania Department of Environmental Protection (DEP) estimates the average cost to cap a well is $33,000.

As a result, drilling companies no longer need to cover the full costs of closing a well.

This places the burden of plugging abandoned wells on Pennsylvania taxpayers.

The DEP has located about 27,000 abandoned methane wells, but the agency says an additional 350,000 abandoned wells remain undocumented.

Solar development involves the installation of temporary structures that will feed our electric grid for decades.

They produce no air emissions and, if properly sited, they have minimal to no impact on water quality.

Meanwhile, the legislature protects industries with a history of impacting our air, streams, and drinking wells from paying the real costs of the harm they inflict.

Click Here for PennFuture’s statement.

Related Articles:

-- House Environmental Committee Moves Solar Energy Facility Decommissioning Best Practices; Food Processing Waste Bills  [PaEN]

-- PennFuture: Lawmakers Move Bill To Require Clean Solar Energy Facilities To Have Bonds; But Fail To Have Adequate Plugging Bonds For Dirty Oil & Gas Wells Leaving Taxpayers To Pick Up The Cost  [PaEN]

-- Pittsburgh Business Times: Mitsubishi Heavy Industries Flips Switch On First Of 3 Massive Solar Energy Projects In Fayette, Somerset Counties To Add 43 MW To PJM Grid

-- Centre County Recycling & Refuse Authority Receives $75,000 West Penn Energy Fund Grant For Solar Energy Array; Will Save $2 Million Over 25 Years; Power Renewable Gas Facility  [PaEN]

-- Stroud Water Research Center Receives $141,000 Grant From Green Mountain Energy Sun Club For New 55-Kilowatt Rooftop Solar Energy System  [PaEN]

-- Post-Gazette: USDA Announces Major Investments In Rural Communities: Somerset Farmer’s Solar Energy Project Highlighted 

-- Sen. Yaw Introduces Bill To Prohibit State Government From Owning Any Clean Energy Credits; Would Force The Use Of More Taxpayer Money To Plug Conventional Oil & Gas Wells Routinely Abandoned By Conventional Well Owners  [PaEN]

-- No False Solutions PA Coalition: 2nd Carbon Dioxide Leak Reported At ADM Carbon Capture Plant In Illinois, Delay In Notifying Public  Should Give PA Pause On Carbon Capture Storage  [PaEN]

NewsClips:

-- WITF StateImpactPA - Rachel McDevitt: PA Solar Energy Companies Would Need Plan For Eventual Cleanup Under Bill In State House

-- Observer-Reporter: New Solar Farms Look To Shine Bright In Southwestern PA [Mitsubishi Solar Energy Facilities]   [PDF of Article]

-- Post-Gazette: Massive Solar Farms Are Eating Up Acreage Across Rural PA Triggering Fear, Anger, Heated Disputes  [PDF of Article]

-- WITF StateImpactPA - Rachel McDevitt: Solar Co-Op Aims To Lower Cost For Rooftop Solar In Dauphin, Cumberland Counties

-- Tribune-Democrat: Upper Yoder Twp. Drawing Up Regulations For Possible Solar Energy Facilities

-- Williamsport Sun Editorial: Old Lycoming Twp. Solar Energy Facility Permit Good For Energy Needs, Liberty

-- Philadelphia Solar Energy Assn.: Nov. 2 Teacher Training For Junior Solar Sprint

-- WHYY: Wilmington’s Hagley Museum Using Historic Dams Along Brandywine River To Get Off Electric Grid

-- WITF StateImpactPA - Rachel McDevitt: ‘Life Waste’ Is A Musical Tour Of The Potential Of Biogas [Dickinson College Farm Methane Digester] 

[Posted: October 2, 2024]

 


10/7/2024

Go To Preceding Article     Go To Next Article

Return to This PA Environment Digest's Main Page