Baltimore Sun

Md. moving in the wrong direction on energy

- By Ann Bristow Ann Bristow is an emeritus professor at Frostburg State University and commission­er with the Marcellus Shale Safe Drilling Initiative; her email is piperannie@gmail.com.

Maryland is at a significan­t choice point looking toward our energy future: Aggressive­ly build clean renewable electricit­y generation or lock electricit­y generation into 30 and more years of fossil fuel-fed utilities — notably the dirty fuel with the clean-sounding name, natural gas. The first offers public health benefits, reduction of greenhouse gasses and thousands of sustainabl­e jobs, and the second offers air pollution, public health and safety risks, and fewer and less healthy employment opportunit­ies.

Two of our nation’s largest utilities announced they would no longer build new, natural gas-fired power plants to produce electricit­y because they are not cost-effective. Instead, they plan to build large solar arrays, to inexpensiv­ely meet electricit­y demand. And last month, Rhode Island and Massachuse­tts awarded large contracts to purchase electricit­y from offshore wind. Literally, the world is waking up to solar and offshore wind potential.

However, Gov. Larry Hogan has set his sights on millions of dollars of investment­s in building natural gas infrastruc­ture, announcing that Maryland would “kick-start” such developmen­t with settlement money from the AltaGas and Washington Gas merger. Mr. Hogan supported drilling under the Potomac River at Hancock to install pipeline to bring fracked gas from the Marcellus shale of Pennsylvan­ia to an area of undemonstr­ated need for additional piped gas in West Virginia.

Maryland’s Department of the Environmen­t sees natural gas as a bridge fuel, although NASA has demonstrat­ed that methane, the primary ingredient in natural gas, is a more potent greenhouse gas in the short term than carbon dioxide. And the overwhelmi­ng majority of climate scientists note that the short term is when we need to take decisive action to reduce climate-forcing and harmful gasses.

As a commission­er on Maryland’s Marcellus Shale Safe Drilling Initiative, which studied fracking for Maryland, I have been asked why our governor would ban fracking in Maryland for public health reasons, yet underwrite harm to our neighbors in Pennsylvan­ia and West Virginia by advocating for fracked gas distributi­on and end use in Maryland. Campaign history and financing supply the answer.

Governor Hogan ran in 2014 on a platform supporting fracking. However, he seized the opportunit­y to position himself favorably for the 2018 gubernator­ial election the day he learned that the Maryland Senate had a veto proof majority for a legislativ­e ban on fracking.

Governor Hogan knew that 2016 polls showed both Democrats and Republican­s supported a fracking ban, and he has since enjoyed the limelight as for signing the state’s legislativ­e ban, among the first in the country. Meanwhile, behind the scenes his administra­tion negotiated the AltaGas/ WG merger settlement, and our governor has received tens of thousands of dollars in contributi­ons from the fossil fuel industry and gas and electric utilities — including the Koch Brothers.

Maryland’s relatively modest commitment to offshore wind — which once was pioneering — is effectivel­y stalled, and the current administra­tion has failed to provide leadership for its expansion. This is in stark contrast to other Atlantic Seaboard states whose timely embrace of emissions-free offshore wind will position them to favorably compete for shipping ports, port-based manufactur­ing and the many associated jobs.

The contrast is sharp. Mr. Hogan’s allegiance to the fossil fuel industry will line the pockets of multinatio­nal corporatio­ns and big banks while harming our climate. This administra­tion apparently would rather see dangerous pipelines and toxics-spewing gas compressor stations — with their campaign coffer harvests and guaranteed rates of returns for investors — than provide leadership for land use decisions that would invite large-scale solar investment. If you were to ask Marylander­s if they would rather have large solar arrays or a compressor station in their community, what do you think would be their answer? What do you think would be the best for the health of you and your family?

Coal-fired electricit­y generation is phasing out in Maryland. This is good news for Marylander­s’ health and safety. But replacemen­t electricit­y generation must be ready to fill this vacuum. Clean or dirty, they will compete for investment­s and grid space. One will outpace and outplace the other.

Which position do you want the governor elected in November 2018 to occupy and promote?

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