By Ben Geman -
11/05/12
The conservative American Legislative Exchange Council (ALEC) is
launching an effort to repeal state-based laws that require
utilities to provide escalating amounts of power from renewable
sources like wind and solar energy.
The corporate-backed group of state lawmakers has developed
so-called model legislation called the “Electricity Freedom Act,”
which it hopes to advance in several of the roughly 30 states that
have renewable electricity standards.
Todd Wynn, staff director of ALEC’s Energy, Environment and
Agriculture task force, told E2-Wire that the election could provide
chances to advance the bill in states including Montana and North
Carolina if Republicans there win races for governor.
Midwest Energy News
reported at length Monday on the effort.
Wynn said the new bill is based on ALEC’s opposition to “mandates
that force politically preferred energy sources over others.”
“[F]orcing business, industry, and ratepayers to use renewable
energy through a government mandate will increase the cost of doing
business and push companies to do business with other states or
nations, thereby decreasing American competitiveness,” the bill
states, calling the state standards “essentially a tax” on
consumers.
But green energy advocates say the state standards have boosted
green energy without hurting consumers’ pocketbooks.
An analysis by the liberal Center for American Progress, citing
Energy Information Administration data, found that state standards
did not have a “statistically significant” impact on electricity
rate changes between 2000 and 2010.
“We will be working with our allies on the ground to defend these
standards,” said Marchant Wentworth, the deputy legislative director
for the climate and energy program at the Union of Concerned
Scientists.
ALEC brings together companies and conservative state lawmakers who
develop bills on a range of topics. The group has task forces on
education, energy, communications, tax policy and other topics.
© 2012 Capitol Hill Publishing Corp., a subsidiary of News
Communications, Inc.
http://thehill.com/blogs/e2-wire/e2-wire/265885-alec-takes-aim-at-state-green-power-standards