The Mercury (Pottstown, PA)

Pa.’s carbon plan clears last regulatory hurdle

- By Marc Levy

HARRISBURG >> The centerpiec­e of Gov. Tom Wolf’s plan to fight climate change passed its last regulatory hurdle Wednesday, in a hardfought bid to make Pennsylvan­ia the first major fossil fuel state to adopt a carbon pricing policy.

The plan to impose a price on carbon dioxide emissions from fossil fuel-fired power plants in Pennsylvan­ia won a 3-2 party-line vote from the Independen­t Regulatory Review Commission, a five-member panel made up of three Democratic appointees and two Republican appointees.

The vote allows Pennsylvan­ia, through regulation, to impose carbonpric­ing as part of a multistate consortium, the Regional Greenhouse Gas Initiative, which sets a price and declining limits on carbon dioxide emissions from power plants.

A chief argument against Wolf’s plan had been that making fossil fuels more expensive would send power generation to neighborin­g states with no emissions caps and devastate local coal-mining jobs and economies. Others questioned the need to do it if Pennsylvan­ia won’t directly see more moderate temperatur­es or weather events.

“We realize Pennsylvan­ia cannot combat climate change on its own, but we also must recognize that the rest of the world cannot combat climate change without us,” Wolf’s environmen­tal protection secretary, Patrick McDonnell, told the panel in his opening remarks.

The heavily populated and fossil fuel-rich Pennsylvan­ia has long been one of the nation’s biggest polluters and power producers and the jury is out on whether a carbon-pricing program would significan­tly reduce greenhouse gas emissions.

Its effectiven­ess could depend on where emissions caps are set and whether hundreds of millions of dollars paid by owners of coal- and natural gas-fueled power plants are wisely spent on clean energy and energy efficiency programs.

The regulation could take several months to be officially published and become final. Once it does, Pennsylvan­ia would join California, Washington and the 11 states already in the greenhouse gas consortium to adopt a carbon pricing policy, according to the Center for Climate and Energy Solutions.

Wolf wants it to take effect next year, although a legal challenge is expected before that to contend that the regulation­s exceeds the authority of Wolf’s Department of Environmen­tal Protection. The Republican-controlled Legislatur­e also may try to muster veto-proof majorities to block it.

The plan has staunch opposition from Republican lawmakers, coaland natural gas-related interests who would pay more to operate, business groups that fear higher electricit­y bills and labor unions whose workers maintain power plants, build gas pipelines and mine coal, fearing a loss of jobs.

It is backed by Democrats, nuclear power plant owners, the renewable energy sector and environmen­tal advocacy groups, while the Wolf administra­tion projects reductions in air pollution and electricit­y bills, improvemen­ts in public health and a stronger economy.

In theory, electricit­y from solar, wind and nuclear power generators would become more cost competitiv­e in electricit­y markets.

In some cases, Wolf’s plan has received support from backers of higher-efficiency natural gas plants and labor unions involved in work on renewable energy projects. It also motivated the Ohio-based owner of nuclear-powered Beaver Valley Power Station to put off plans to close the plant.

Strong opposition has emerged from coal communitie­s, with coal advocates saying the plan would prematurel­y shut down coal mines and coal-fired power plants in Pennsylvan­ia. One testifier who said he worked at a coal-fired power plant called it “an assassinat­ion of blue-collar jobs.”

Rep. James Struzzi, RIndiana, whose district is home to two coal-fired plants, told the panel that people are “terrified” of what carbon-pricing will do their community.

“It’s an assault on a particular industry to benefit other industries, and that is simply not acceptable,” Struzzi said.

 ?? KEITH SRAKOCIC - THE ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? In this file photo from June 10, a flume of emissions flow from a stack at the Cheswick Generating Station, a coal-fired power plant, in Springdale, Pa. A plan to impose a price on carbon dioxide emissions from fossil fuel-fired power plants in Pennsylvan­ia is going before the Independen­t Regulatory Review Commission, a fivemember panel made up of three Democratic appointees and two Republican appointees on Wednesday.
KEITH SRAKOCIC - THE ASSOCIATED PRESS In this file photo from June 10, a flume of emissions flow from a stack at the Cheswick Generating Station, a coal-fired power plant, in Springdale, Pa. A plan to impose a price on carbon dioxide emissions from fossil fuel-fired power plants in Pennsylvan­ia is going before the Independen­t Regulatory Review Commission, a fivemember panel made up of three Democratic appointees and two Republican appointees on Wednesday.

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