Snow White vs. Green Goddess
(Roger D. Feldman - Jul. 25, 2007)
Jul 25, 2007 - PowerMarketers Industry Publications
by Roger D. Feldman
Energy mirror on the wall, who’s the greenest of them all? For years it
seemed to be natural gas: no SOX, no NOX, no waste disposal problem. Amidst
the hoopla of the titanic conflict between oil and renewable tax incentives
(and incidentally Federal RPS in the recent Senate Bill), the potential
impact on natural gas of clean/renewable energy legislative developments has
received less attention. A National Environmental Energy Development (NEED)
Act was indeed proposed in mid-June in the House at the instance of the
natural gas industry. It would significantly lift restrictions on domestic
production on the Outer Continental Shelf and, in return, plow resulting
royalties into renewable energy and carbon sequestration research, selected
major environmental restoration projects, and even low-income energy and
weatherization programs meant to be a green-for-green swap, so to speak.
This type of proposed tradeoff obscures the larger quandary, however, which
clean/renewable development poses over the long term for clean natural gas
use in the United States, depending on the form this new “Green Goddess”
eventually takes.
First, one of natural gas’s premier markets is, of course, the electric
power industry (which, not so long ago, never saw a combined cycle plant it
didn’t like). In this market, natural gas is being pushed, by several
forces, somewhat away from its “clean fuel favorite” status. As a result of
the Resource Performance Standards, now spreading to many states (though not
yet Congressionally enacted), many electric utilities are required to meet
an increasing portion of their power purchase requirements from specified
renewable sources, without reference to relative cost competitiveness. Thus,
while many eastern utilities are being pushed by the Clean Air Interstate
Requirements and the continuing requirements of the Clean Air Act to lower
SOX and NOX emissions, they cannot turn to natural gas as they otherwise
might have been inclined to do. The consequences of the Greenhouse Gas
regulations (especially combined with RPS) could further renewables
development, rather than catapult natural gas back to preeminence as the
clean fuel.
As entry of renewables into the electric utility fuel mix accelerates, the
effect will be to increase the overall price of power. As that occurs, even
without any Federal incentives for energy efficiency or to support
demand/response measures, there may be expected to be market-driven
conservation, reducing natural gas use at the margin in many jurisdictions.
(Some of which marginal price increase will either impact existing gas
plants or dampen the incentive to build new ones.) In significant part, that
is what the so-called “Clean Tech” movement is about: finding processes
which either through significantly improved industrial operation, through
process waste system utilization, or through quantum improvement energy
technology production, anticipate or respond to higher electric costs of
production. (Two other aspects of Clean Tech thinking are to combine
improving renewables, like solar, with energy efficiency measures which, for
example, reduce the use of energy by commercial and residential
establishments or with natural gas use for power firming.)
Second, on a smaller scale, a clear advantage of natural gas has been its
use in smaller power engines either used in Clean Air Act Non-Attainment
Areas or in certain industrial facilities as part of user reliability
strategies. An emerging contender for this market niche, however, is
biodiesel or renewable diesel. While still in short supply in the United
States (particularly as compared with Europe), these fuels seem likely to
enjoy an increasing incentive from the Renewable Fuel Standards (“RFS”)
which, first, are increasingly-higher requirements for their blending with
conventional hydrocaron fuel and, second, provide significantly more
favorable weighting of biodiesel’s RFS fulfillment value (2.7) relative to
ethanol (1.0). There are also, of course, significant tax incentives for
biodiesel manufacture. Along similar lines, the extent of use of natural gas
in vehicles such as municipal bus fleets is vulnerable to increased
biodiesel (and hybrid vehicles) uses. Monetization of Renewable Energy
Credits and possible future GHG reduction credits are not, and likely will
not be, available for natural gas use.
Natural gas use also is subject to its own environmental challenges,
although in different ways. Methane leakage, for example, will be subject to
harsh GHG regulation, thus the reduction of pipeline leakage likely will be
required.
Finally, the development playing field has been somewhat tilted towards
renewables. Like tax, R&D loan guarantees and other market incentives,
issuance of proposed carbon reduction credits is a province of the Green
Goddess, not Snow White.
So it would appear that there is a natural gas industry NEED for a
legislative and regulatory radar that tracks all Green Goddess movements, if
current market niches are not to be snatched from Snow White. All types of
clean and renewable energy incentive programs have significance, but
Resource Performance Standards, Renewable Fuel Standards, and future Green
House Gas Regulations stand out as potential counterbalances to natural gas
use’s current cost edge. When Wall Street appraises gas company corporate
governance, sensitivity to these issues, indeed countermeasures to hedge
their stake in the green market, may well be factors that will be examined
more carefully. The beauty contest between Snow White and the Green Goddess
is just beginning, and Snow White had better check her rear view mirror now.
___________________________________________
ROGER D. FELDMAN Roger Feldman is in the Washington DC office of Andrews
Kurth, LLP [202-662-3048; rogerfeldman@andrewskurth.com.], where he is a
senior member of the Clean and Renewable Energy Group. He chairs the
American Bar Association Special Committee on Energy and Environmental
Finance and the American Council on Renewable Energy Trading Markets
Committee. He specializes in energy/environmental finance and related
regulatory matters.
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