The Morning Call

Shapiro breaks with Wolf on climate change strategy

Candidate for governor concerned about energy prices, industry impact

- By Marc Levy

HARRISBURG — Josh Shapiro, the Democratic candidate for governor, is breaking with Gov. Tom Wolf on the centerpiec­e of Wolf’s plan to fight climate change amid the strong and sustained pushback it has received from building trades unions that have long backed the party’s candidates for governor.

Wolf — a fellow Democrat who has endorsed Shapiro, the state’s two-term attorney general — has worked for two years to finalize regulation­s to make Pennsylvan­ia the first major fossil fuel state to adopt a carbon pricing policy by imposing a price on carbon dioxide emissions from power plants.

Wolf has called it a “historic, proactive and progressiv­e approach that will have significan­t positive environmen­tal, public health and economic impacts.”

But Shapiro, in a statement

from his 2-week-old campaign, suggested that Wolf ’s plan — which involves joining the multistate Regional Greenhouse Gas Initiative consortium — does not satisfy criticism that it will hurt the state’s energy industry, drives up electric prices and does little to curtail greenhouse gases.

“We need to take real action to

address climate change, protect and create energy jobs and ensure Pennsylvan­ia has reliable, affordable and clean power for the long term,” Shapiro said in the statement. “As governor, I will implement an energy strategy which passes that test, and it’s not clear to me that RGGI does.”

That, he said, “is a determinat­ion I will make as governor, in close consultati­on with workers and affected communitie­s.”

Even if he wins next year’s election, Shapiro — as state attorney general — could before then be in the position of rendering legal judgment on Wolf’s carbon-pricing regulation.

Shapiro’s statement came just before he spoke Wednesday to a conference of union leaders from the pipeline trades. They are among the labor unions whose members work on power plants, gas pipelines and refineries.

Shapiro has made similar comments previously, both to the Indiana Gazette and officials from the Boilermake­rs’ union. The day Shapiro formally announced his candidacy, Oct. 13, he had lunch at the electricia­ns’ union hall in Pittsburgh, where they asked him about his position.

“He told me he does not stand for RGGI the way it stands right now and he feels it should be run through the Legislatur­e,” John Hughes, the business manager of Boilermake­rs Local 154, said Tuesday. “We should get everyone to the table and talk about it. ... I said, ‘We are going to support the guy who doesn’t support RGGI,’ and he told me, ‘I can’t support it as is.’ ”

Wolf said Tuesday that he still expects his plan to take effect next year. For now, Wolf ’s plan faces solid opposition from Republican­s in the Legislatur­e and in the double-digit-deep GOP field running for governor in next year’s election.

Republican­s who control the Legislatur­e can halt Wolf ’s carbon-pricing regulation if they win over enough Democrats to muster veto-proof majorities in both the House and Senate.

State law sets a timeline for that vote to happen. If the regulation survives, the state attorney general’s office must review it — as it does every regulation — for “form and legality” before it can take effect.

Wolf ’s regulation also faces litigation from opponents who question its legality, and Shapiro’s office could be tasked with defending the regulation in court.

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 on power plants would significan­tly reduce greenhouse gas emissions.

Its effectiven­ess could depend on where emissions caps are set and whether money from the emissions credits are wisely spent on clean energy and energy efficiency programs.

Wolf ’s carbon-pricing regulation has broad support from environmen­tal advocacy groups and, in theory, electricit­y from solar, wind and nuclear power generators would become more cost competitiv­e in electricit­y markets.

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

Coal advocates say the plan would prematurel­y shut down coal mines and coal-fired power plants in Pennsylvan­ia, while many in the natural gas industry have opposed it.

 ?? KEITH SRAKOCIC/AP ?? Pennsylvan­ia’s Democratic attorney general Josh Shapiro speaks to a crowd Oct. 13 in Pittsburgh during the launch of his campaign for Pennsylvan­ia governor.
KEITH SRAKOCIC/AP Pennsylvan­ia’s Democratic attorney general Josh Shapiro speaks to a crowd Oct. 13 in Pittsburgh during the launch of his campaign for Pennsylvan­ia governor.

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