The Palm Beach Post

Uncertaint­y for wind, solar after Trump win

President’s views, vows, choices have proponents worried.

- By Cathy Bussewitz and Geoff Mulvihill Associated Press

HONOLULU — President Dona l d Tr ump has di spute d climate change, pledged a revival of coal and disparaged wind power, and his nominee to head the Energy Department was once highly skeptical of the agency’s value. What this means for states’ efforts to promote renewable energy is an open question.

States that are pushing for greater reliance on wind and solar power are not quite sure what to expect as Trump takes over. Many of them depend heavily on federal renewable-energy tax credits, grants and research, much of which comes from the Energy Department.

Former Texas Gov. Rick Perry, Trump’s pick to lead the department, presents a contradic tory figure: A Texas oil promoter, he also oversaw a huge expansion of wind-energy production while governor. When he ran for president in 2011, he included Energy on a list of department­s he thought should be abolished, though he disavowed the idea Thursday at his Senate confirmati­on hearing.

“We don’t know what version of Perry is going to show up,” said Michael Webber, deputy director of the Energy Institute at the University of Texas, Austin.

R e n e w a b l e e n e r g y accounts for about 15 percent of the electricit­y generated in the United States. And 29 states have set targets for boosting their reliance on such power.

Officials, experts and advocates in more than a halfdozen states with some of the most ambitious goals told The Associated Press that they are on course to meet their targets. Most said that while Trump policies could slow the expansion, they won’t stop it.

The price of harnessing the power of the sun and wind has dropped so much that in many areas of the country, experts say it could be competitiv­e with traditiona­l power sources such as coal and natural gas even without federal subsidies. Further, they do not expect a fast repeal of the key federal tax credits that have propelled the industry for years.

St i l l , poli c i es ai med at bringing more renewable power online quickly are not expected while Trump is in office.

“We need to be moving faster, not slower,” said Jeff Forward, president of the t r a d e g r o u p Re n e wa b l e Energy Vermont . “I fe a r we’re tapping on the brakes right now.”

T h o s e w h o p r o m o t e renewable energy are concerned because Trump has exp re s s e d doubt s a b out whether climate change is real, even though scientists agree that it is happening and that the burning of fossil fuels is a major reason for it.

Trump also has called for reviving the coal industry, which has struggled in part because of the rise of renewable energy. And he has criticized wind turbines near Palm Springs, California, both for killing birds and for looking like a “junkyard.”

Perry, at his confirmati­on hearings, said he believes climate change is happening and that some of it is caused by human activity. He also said he favors an “all of the above” energy policy, the way he did in Texas, and wants the federal government to continue research on renewable energy. He didn’t say what he thought of green-energy tax credits and other incentives.

The federal wind credit is set to be phased out in 2019, and the one for solar four years after that. Those incentives and other federal spending on renewable energy in fiscal year 2015 totaled about $10 billion, nearly twice as much as similar subsidies for fossil fuels.

I n Hawai i , f e d e r a l t a x credits reduced the price for developers and homeowners by about $125 million annually from 2011 to 2014, according to an analysis by Blue Planet Foundation. During that time, the portion of the state’s electricit­y coming from renewables nearly doubled from 12 to 21 percent.

Randy Iwase, chairman of the Hawaii Public Utilities Commission, said incentives are important to the state’s goal of having 100 percent of its power generated from renewable sources by 2045, the nation’s most aggressive target.

The Energy Department said in a report last year that the cost of getting power from wind fell more than 40 percent from 2008 to 2015, and solar panel prices dropped more than 60 percent in that period.

Market forces have made green power big in Republican-led states, with wind turbines springing up along the Great Plains from Iowa to Texas. In those places — many of which have low or no green-energy requiremen­ts — the arguments for renewable power are more often cost savings and job creation, rather than the environmen­tal benefits.

In December, Republican Gov. John Kasich of Ohio ve t o e d a bi l l t hat would have delayed the requiremen­ts there. This month, Vermont’s new GOP Gov. Phil Scott affirmed his commitment to Vermont’s goal of 90 percent green power by 2050.

Meanwhile, some Democratic-leaning states have been pushing their requiremen­ts upward. Since 2015, both New York and Californi a have i nc re a s ed t hei r t a r get s t o 50 percent by 2030, and New York Gov. Andrew Cuomo has indicated he would like to go further than that.

 ??  ??
 ??  ??

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States