Congress Seen Backing Renewable Energy Standard
Date: 11-Feb-09
Country: US
Author: Tom Doggett
Congress Seen Backing Renewable Energy Standard Photo: Jonathan Ernst

A power-generating windmill turbine operates in a wind farm
on Backbone Mountain near Thomas, West Virginia, August 28, 2006.
Photo: Jonathan Ernst
WASHINGTON - There is enough support in the U.S. Congress to pass
legislation requiring utilities to generate a portion of their electricity
supplies from wind, solar and other renewable energy sources, the chairman
of the Senate Energy and Natural Resources Committee said on Tuesday.
The committee held a hearing on draft legislation that would set a national
renewable electricity standard, which would help meet President Barack
Obama's goal to double renewable energy production over the next three
years.
Under the bill, the amount of the U.S. electricity supply coming from
renewable energy sources would gradually increase to 4 percent in 2011-12, 8
percent in 2013-15, 12 percent in 2016-18, 16 percent in 2019-20 and 20
percent in 2021-39.
"I think that the votes are present in the Senate to pass a renewable
electricity standard. I think that they are present in the House," Sen. Jeff
Bingaman, the energy committee's chairman, said. "I think that we need to
get on with figuring out what we can pass and move forward."
Qualifying renewable energy sources under the bill would be wind, solar,
ocean currents and waves, geothermal, biomass, landfill gas and incremental
hydropower.
Creating a renewable electricity standard would reduce U.S. dependence on
fossil fuel sources that run power plants and cut those facilities'
emissions of greenhouse gases linked to global warming and other pollutants,
Bingaman said.
"This standard would also spur the development of a national green energy
economy, creating hundreds of thousands of jobs, many in rural areas," he
said.
However, power companies and regulators in southern states, where coal is
popular for electricity generation, generally oppose a federal renewable
standard. They argue not all states have abundant renewable energy resources
like wind.
David Wright, commissioner of the South Carolina Public Service Commission,
said a federal renewable standard "fails to recognize that there are
significant differences among the states in terms of available and
cost-effective renewable energy resources, and that having such a standard
in energy legislation will ultimately increase consumers' electricity
bills."
(Editing by Walter Bagley)
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