Electric Cooperatives Take Action on Climate
Mar 20 - Missoulian
As a whole, the power industry hasn't exactly rushed into the forefront of
action on global warming, but now Montana's electric cooperatives are taking
the initiative. "Our position on climate change is to take action, and we do
have a proposal for how to best deal with it," said Gary Weins, assistant
general manager of the Montana Electric Cooperatives Association, which is
headquartered in Great Falls.
MECA is a not-for-profit, statewide trade association that represents 26
consumer-owned electric distribution cooperatives and three generation and
transmission cooperatives. Those co-ops serve more than 250,000 people
across Montana and the Dakotas, Wyoming and Idaho.
"We know that this is a serious issue that our customers, who are our
owners, want us to address," Weins said during a recent interview in
Missoula. "Three-quarters of all Americans believe that global warming is
something we need to do something about, so we want to be out front on it.''
MECA's plan derives from one developed by the Electric Power Research
Institute, an independent nonprofit organization for public interest energy
environmental research. The plan focuses on what EPRI calls the "full
portfolio," a broad-spectrum approach to cutting carbon dioxide emissions
while not decimating the economy.
The portfolio, designed to cut carbon dioxide emissions to 1990 levels by
2030, is built on seven technologies, some already in place, others in need
of more development:
* End-use energy efficiency.
* Renewable energy.
* Advanced, light-water nuclear reactors.
* Advanced and clean coal power plants.
* Carbon dioxide capturetechnologies.
*Plug-in hybrid electric vehicles.
*Distributed energy resources, which include new ways to capture and and
distribute power generated by wind and solar sources.
"What we're dealing with is a sort of perfect storm, where prices are
increasing and sources of power are declining, and now we've thrown global
warming on top," Weins said. "It's a situation that demands action, and it
won't be easy, but we are excited about playing a role."
Implementing some of the strategies will result in some reduction in carbon
dioxide emissions, but both EPRI and Weins said the reduction to 1990 levels
requires the entire range of alternatives.
"If you don't use it all, the line that graphs emissions continues to-move
up," Weins said. "And we have the ability to do it, the ingenuity to do
it,and people want it done."
Weins said the plan requires significant American investment in new
technologies over the next three decades, but will produce a significant
savings and a renewable energy future in the bargain.
"It's expensive, but we can't afford not to do it," Weins said.
Some of the technologies needed to make the shift to carbon dioxide
reduction aren't really commercially viable yet. For instance, it's true
that carbon dioxide can be captured from power plants with current
technologies, but the costs to do so are exorbitant, both to industry and
consumers.
"Carbon capture isn't there right now, but it can be by 2020, and it's
critical if we're going to cut emission levels,"; Weins said. "You've got to
have all the technologies on the table."
Montana cooperatives are already looking at other technologies as they
prepare for a coming cutback in power supply from the Bonneville Power
Administration.
"That will result in a 5 to 10 percent reduction in supply, and there are
co-ops looking at replacing some of that with wind farms," Weins said.
"They're also looking at being more efficient, with can be both quick and
cheap."
Weins said MECA believes that power suppliers have an obligation to take
action on global warming.
"We're at the center of the process, bring power from suppliers to
consumers," he said. "We need to play a role in making sure that equation is
designed to solve our problems rather than making them worse."
Copyright The Missoulian Feb 7, 2008
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