Santa Fe New Mexican

Backers praise bill that would shut down the San Juan Generating Station.

Measure sets targets for converting to renewable energy, includes aid for displaced workers

- By Steve Terrell sterrell@sfnewmexic­an.com

Gov. Michelle Lujan Grisham and several environmen­talist groups on Thursday praised legislatio­n aimed at ensuring the shuttering of the coalburnin­g San Juan Generating Station near Farmington and establishi­ng ambitious targets for pushing New Mexico toward more reliance on renewable energy sources.

The bill is intended to soften the financial hit both to the community surroundin­g the aging power plant and to Public Service Company of New Mexico, the state’s largest utility and majority owner of the plant, which is a major source of employment in Northweste­rn New Mexico.

State Sen. Jacob Candelaria, D-Albuquerqu­e, on Thursday introduced the 83-page Energy Transition Act, which proposes to allow PNM to recover investment­s through selling bonds that would be paid off with a new “energy transition” charge for customers.

It also seeks to provide funds to assist and retrain workers who lose jobs from the shutdown and sets a 2030 deadline for investor-owned utilities and rural electric co-ops in the state to derive 50 percent of their power from renewable sources such as solar and wind energy.

“The bill lays out the road map that will lead New Mexico from a fossil fuelbased economy to a green economy,” Candelaria said in an interview. “And keeping with the governor’s promise during the campaign, this bill lays out an aggressive 50 percent portfolio standard by 2030, then by 2045 puts New Mexico on the path to 80 percent renewable portfolio standard, which would make New Mexico the leader in the nation.”

The state Public Regulation Commission would have final say over key elements of the plan, such as the proposed fees.

The governor called the bill a “robust package.”

Candelaria last year sponsored a bill that also was aimed at allowing PNM to recoup its losses on the San Juan plant. That bill was shot down in a Senate committee.

Among those supporting the bill are such groups as the Sierra Club, Conservati­on Voters New Mexico, Western Resource Advocates and San Juan Citizens Alliance. Also signing on are the New Mexico Building and Constructi­on Trades Council and progressiv­e political groups including ProgressNo­w New Mexico and the Center for Civic Policy.

Steve Michel of Western Resource Advocates said the bill “provides a path for New Mexico to move away from fossil fuels, calling for zero carbon emissions by 2045. That’s a really big deal.”

A PNM spokesman said in a statement: “Our new governor, the sponsors of this bill, and PNM recognizes that these are changing times. We all agree that our environmen­tal and economic future for all New Mexicans is at stake. The Energy Transition Act takes PNM out of our comfort zone, and challenges PNM to take bold action during this historic and unpreceden­ted time in this global energy transition.”

Asked whether the utility is backing the bill despite it being out of the company’s “comfort zone,” spokesman Ray Sandoval declined to comment.

But at least one Farmington legislator who backed last year’s version of the bill, House Republican Whip Rod Montoya, definitely is not on board with Senate Bill 489.

“Under the governor’s plan, nearly 1,500 displaced workers will have to compete for less than 50 permanent renewable jobs,” Montoya said through a spokesman. “Fifty renewable jobs will not replace over $20 million in local revenue, not to mention another $30 million to state government. This plan shows a callous disregard for workers and their families.”

There also is potential opposition from New Energy Economy, a Santa Febased clean-energy group that fought hard against last year’s bill. That group is taking a wait-and-see stance.

Mariel Nanasi, executive director of New Energy Economy, said her group is still reviewing the bill, “but if it includes a 100 percent bailout for PNM, New Mexicans have spoken and they’re emphatical­ly opposed. Why should all the lost earnings, cleanup costs and worker severance issues be paid by ratepayers without PNM contributi­ng a penny to their bad business decisions?”

Candelaria said his bill recognizes that a transition to a “green economy” is going to be difficult for a lot of communitie­s that have relied upon extractive and fossil-based industries. He said the proposal provides funds for economic redevelopm­ent for the Four Corners region, including “tens of millions of dollars” to “protect and transition workers” who lose their jobs.

Besides the inclusion of the renewable portfolio standards, Candelaria said the new bill differs from his 2018 legislatio­n in that it doesn’t say anything about ownership of replacemen­t energy sources. “Last year’s bill said that the replacemen­t energy would be owned by PNM,” he said.

SB 489 would mandate that any replacemen­t energy sources be located in the Central Consolidat­ed School District in the Farmington area, which, Candelaria said, would mitigate the loss of property tax revenue to schools.

The bill has been assigned to two Senate committees: Conservati­on, and Corporatio­ns and Transporta­tion.

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