| Rocky Mountain Power proposes power legislation 
    on pollution-reduction targets   Jan 10 - McClatchy-Tribune Regional News - Jeff DeMoss Standard-Examiner, 
    Ogden, Utah
 Hoping to avoid mandatory reductions in greenhouse-gas emissions, Rocky 
    Mountain Power is proposing legislation that would prohibit the state from 
    imposing specific deadlines on pollution-reduction targets.
 
 The utility said it has its own plan to reduce emissions by increasing the 
    proportion of energy it gets from noncarbon-emitting sources to 20 percent 
    by 2025.
 
 Such sources, primarily wind and hydroelectric, currently account for about 
    3 percent of the company's energy portfolio.
 
 Rocky Mountain Power President Rich Walje, addressing the Standard-Examiner 
    editorial board on Wednesday, said the utility needs flexibility to meet 
    rapidly growing demand for electricity in Utah.
 
 About 85 percent of electricity generated in Utah is derived from coal, 
    which is among the cheapest ways to produce electricity, but is also the 
    nation's top source of greenhouse-gas emissions.
 
 While cleaner technologies are developing, coal will have to continue to be 
    a major part of the resource mix in the near future to keep service reliable 
    and cost-effective, Walje said.
 
 "The legislation is meant to address policy objectives without forcing us to 
    do things that are not economical for our customers," he said. "We want 
    policy direction, but we don't want to be told to do a certain thing at a 
    certain time."
 
 Forced changes to the utility's energy portfolio could cause drastic spikes 
    in customers' monthly bills and reliability problems as demand grows, he 
    said.
 
 Rocky Mountain Power plans to reduce emissions through increased use of 
    nuclear, geothermal and hydroelectric power.
 
 It also plans to implement carbon-sequestration technology to reduce 
    emissions from coal- and natural gas-fired generation.
 
 Utah Senate Majority Leader Curtis Bramble, R-Provo, plans to sponsor a bill 
    supporting the company's goal in the upcoming legislative session, which 
    begins Jan. 21.
 
 As the federal government and some states move closer to pollution-reduction 
    mandates, utilities are becoming wary of building more coal-fired plants in 
    the face of increased opposition.
 
 "There will clearly be a carbon-management regime at the national level 
    within the next couple of years," Walje said.
 
 "That brings a lot of uncertainty to our decisions."
 |