Clallam Public Utility District backs effort to amend I-937

Peninsula Daily News

Changes sought on clean-energy rules
By Phuong Le
The Associated Press
SEATTLE — Ever since voters passed a law requiring the state's largest utilities to get more electricity from wind, solar and other renewable power, there's been no shortage of attempts to overhaul the rules.

This legislative session is no different.

Several GOP-backed bills being considered would loosen restrictions, a possibility that has drawn criticism from Gov. Jay Inslee and opponents who say it would undercut the law aimed at spurring clean energy sources and reducing pollution.

The measures “actually reduce the effectiveness of our renewable energy standard and take us backward on energy rather than forward,” Inslee said at a news conference last week.

The Energy Independence Act, which state voters passed as Initiative 937 in 2006, requires nearly a third of the state's utilities, those with at least 25,000 customers, to ramp up and get 15 percent of power from wind, solar, geothermal and certain woody biomass by 2020.

All 17 utilities that must follow the law met the first deadline in 2012 by getting 3 percent of their electricity from renewable energy sources or buying equivalent credits.

The companies also met or exceeded energy conservation targets required by the law.

But some lawmakers, utility companies and others say the law creates undue burdens for utilities and raises electricity rates on consumers.

“Every year we don't amend 937, the market become more distorted.
Customers are starting to feel the pinch,” said state Sen. Doug Ericksen, R-Ferndale, head of the Senate Energy, Environment & Telecommunications committee.

Many utilities have enough power to meet consumer needs, but are forced to sell their cheap power to buy more expensive renewable power to comply with the law, said Ericksen, who has sponsored several 937-related bills.

One of the more controversial bills, Senate Bill 5431, would allow hydroelectric power to be counted as a renewable energy source; that bill hasn't been heard in committee yet.

Since most utilities in Washington already get the bulk of power from hydroelectric dams, it would essentially gut the law.

The law excluded hydropower because backers wanted to spur development of new energy sources.

At a committee hearing Tuesday, Grays Harbor Public Utility District and others — not including the Clallam County PUD — testified in support of Senate Bill 5648 that would allow utilities to bank energy they conserve above their targets and apply it to future conservation targets.

It also says utilities that have enough power would not have to meet a 937 target.

“What's happening is that utilities are having to purchase credits that they can't even use to the tune of millions of dollars,” said Sen. Sharon Brown, R-Kennewick, sponsor of SB5648, who referred to her bill as the “no buy before need.”

Environmental groups oppose the bill, saying it would undermine the law. They say 937 has created jobs, brought billions of dollars in clean-energy investments, and stimulated local economies.

Some utilities, such as Puget Sound Energy and Avista Corp., did not support the bill, noting they would be at a disadvantage because they already made long-term investments in wind and other renewable projects to comply with the law.

Business owners and others told lawmakers Tuesday that 937 has resulted in higher rates for consumers and created burdens for businesses.

“It can be argued that these are investments in the future, but the future doesn't do much good for someone who can't pay their electric bill today,” said Tim Boyd with Industrial Customers of Northwest Utilities.

But 937 supporters pointed out that a multitude of factors contribute to rate increases.

Another bill heard Tuesday, Senate Bill 5438, allows utilities that conserve more electricity than required by law to bank that excess and apply it toward meeting future targets.

Officials from utilities such as Seattle City Light, Tacoma Power and Cowlitz Public Utility District spoke in favor of it.
Although no Clallam County Public Utility District official testified before the state Legislature last week (see story, below at right), the agency supports amending Initiative 937.

Clallam PUD has endorsed an effort led by the Tri-Cities Regional Chamber of Commerce to amend the act.

PUD officials want the initiative's exclusion of hydroelectric power as a source of renewable energy reversed and to be allowed to suspend the requirement for meeting the renewable-energy edict until its utility load growth requires it.

The 30,000-customer PUD, which provides electricity to county residents outside of Port Angeles, is the smallest utility in the state among those that must comply with the initiative.

The 2006 Energy Independence Act initiative requires utilities with 25,000 customers or more to purchase 3 percent of their energy from renewable sources such as wind and solar by 2012.

It also requires that 9 percent be drawn from renewable sources by 2016 and 15 percent by 2020.

Electricity in East Jefferson County will continue to be provided by Puget Sound Energy until April, when the Jefferson County Public Utility District will begin providing the service to 19,000 meters.

Last modified: February 16. 2013 7:05PM
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