The Arizona Republic

Lawmakers will not usurp power to set energy rules

- Your Turn Steven G. Zylstra and Doran Miller Guest columnists Steven G. Zylstra is president and CEO of the Arizona Technology Council. Doran Miller is state director of The Western Way. Reach them at szylstra@aztechcoun­cil.org and doran@millerpoli­cycon

Arizona Republic columnist Robert Robb suggests the state would be best served by maintainin­g an outdated clean-energy standard set in 2006, and that the Arizona Corporatio­n Commission (ACC) lacks the authority to update the standard at all.

Robb’s column (”Preempt clean energy mandates,” March 17) misses the mark completely.

He mischaract­erized the Arizona Supreme Court’s holding in Johnson Utilities and the nature of the Corporatio­n Commission’s constituti­onal powers. Additional­ly, he fails to recognize the many ways in which modernizin­g our clean-energy rules will benefit Arizona ratepayers, communitie­s, the economy and environmen­t.

Robb is correct that the bills being considered in the Legislatur­e would freeze Arizona’s current energy standard by placing it in statute and forbidding the Corporatio­n Commission from going further. He is wrong that doing so is a good thing.

Not only do these bills represent an unconstitu­tional power grab by the Legislatur­e, they also create an uncertain regulatory climate for businesses. That poses risks of losing needed economic developmen­t opportunit­ies and crucial jobs. Because availabili­ty of clean and renewable-energy resources is often a deciding factor for locating in a particular state, companies considerin­g Arizona for relocating or expanding their presence would not have the market stability and certainty they require.

That’s why so many companies have supported the commission’s energy rules package: Recently, more than two dozen businesses and business associatio­ns, including Ball Corporatio­n, Google, Microsoft, REI and Salesforce, signed a letter in support of the 100% carbon-free and efficiency standards.

The potential for instabilit­y and uncertaint­y arising should these bills pass is the reason a broad-based coalition of businesses, economic developmen­t organizati­ons, utilities, clean energy providers, manufactur­ers, electric vehicle companies and many others oppose these measures.

Robb also fails to understand the holding in Johnson Utilities v. Arizona Corporatio­n Commission, a landmark Arizona Supreme Court case decided in July 2020 that outlined the ACC’s authority as set forth in the state Constituti­on.

The Constituti­on grants the commission’s broad authority to regulate public service corporatio­ns and breaks it down into two buckets: exclusive authority over ratemaking and permissive authority to make and enforce rules and regulation­s for the “safety and health” of the public, which the ACC holds concurrent­ly with the Legislatur­e.

Promulgati­ng rules that will reduce carbon emissions, improve energy efficiency and increase the adoption of renewable resources — all of which directly relate to improving air quality and the health of the environmen­t and Arizonans — is squarely within the Corporatio­n Commission’s constituti­onal power to regulate for public health and safety.

While lawmakers can set energy policy via statute, they lack the power to decrease state utility regulators’ constituti­onal authority; indeed, as the Supreme Court explicitly stated in the Johnson Utilities ruling, “The legislatur­e lacks the power to decrease the Commission’s constituti­onal authority.” In other words, the Legislatur­e cannot simply forbid the commission from regulating.

Yet, that is exactly what lawmakers are trying to do. The language of the bills before the Legislatur­e, by their very terms, attempts to abrogate the constituti­onal authority of the Corporatio­n Commission by stipulatin­g that it “may not adopt or enforce a policy, decision or rule that directly or indirectly regulates” electric generation resources or carbon emissions.

Clean and renewable energy technologi­es have come a long way since 2006 while at the same time experienci­ng an exponentia­l drop in generation costs. In that time, Arizona has become a hub of technology and innovation, and a leader in the developmen­t of clean and renewable energy technologi­es — a boon for Arizona’s economy.

Even without reference to actual rules being considered by the Corporatio­n Commission, it is simply foolish and regressive to suggest Arizona should be operating under a clean-energy standard set before some of these new technologi­es were even developed and when the cost of generating clean energy was much higher.

Although we support the Legislatur­e having a role in energy policy, these bills simply miss the mark. Our state’s economic growth requires stability and certainty, which means we need to get this right the first time. Let’s take the time to do it right.

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