Chicago Sun-Times

GOV GIVES ENERGY BILL THE GREEN LIGHT

After months of negotiatio­ns, Pritzker signs legislatio­n that puts state on path to 100% clean power by 2050

- BY RACHEL HINTON, POLITICAL REPORTER rhinton@suntimes.com | @rrhinton

Gov. J.B. Pritzker signed wide-ranging legislatio­n overhaulin­g Illinois’ energy sector on Wednesday, calling the bill a “giant leap forward” for the state as it works to address the effects of climate change and establish “aggressive” clean energy standards.

“We can’t outrun or hide from climate change — not to the north where the boundary waters burn, not to the south where Ida swallows lives and livelihood­s in the blink of an eye . ... We’ve seen the effects of climate change right here in Illinois repeatedly in the last two and a half years alone: a polar vortex, devastatin­g floods, microburst­s that destroy buildings,” Pritzker said.

“There is no time to lose but what we can do, what we must do — and thanks to the Climate and Equitable Jobs Act — Illinois is doing, is to fight to stop, and even reverse, the damage that’s been done to our climate. As of today, Illinois is a force for good, for an environmen­tal future we can be proud of.”

The governor was joined by the Democratic leaders of the Illinois House and Senate as well as legislator­s from both parties who served on the negotiatin­g teams of those chambers at the Shedd Aquarium for the bill signing.

House Speaker Emanuel “Chris” Welch said, “Today is for our children, today is for our children’s children” and said Illinois residents “win big today.”

“This bill puts our state on the path to a clean energy future that Illinois deserves, and it gives our state a very clear future,” the Hillside Democrat said, noting the bill was passed with bipartisan support in both chambers.

State Rep. David Welter, R-Morris, and state Sen. Sue Rezin, R-Morris, were the only Republican­s to speak at the event. Welter, whose district is home to half of the state’s nuclear fleet, said Democrats and Republican­s care about a cleaner energy future though they have “a different view of how we get there and when we get there.”

“I feel this bill, although not perfect, was a compilatio­n of a lot of work and a lot of time, a lot of effort to try to get us as close as possible,” Welter said.

U.S. Secretary of Energy Jennifer M. Granholm issued a statement lauding the signing of the legislatio­n, saying it shows “just what bold state-level action can do to usher in the clean energy future.”

After months of negotiatio­ns on an energy bill, the Illinois Senate on Monday sent the legislatio­n to Pritzker’s desk on a 37-17 vote — with three senators voting present — after the Illinois House voted 83-33 last week to pass the measure.

The legislatio­n sets the state on a path to 100% clean energy by 2050 through a mix of providing subsidies to nuclear plants and setting closure timelines for coal and natural gas firing facilities among other things.

It provides nearly $700 million over five years to Exelon nuclear plants and requires municipal coal firing plants — such as Prairie State and Springfiel­d’s City Water, Light and Power — to cut their emissions by 45% by 2035 before closing 10 years later unless they can generate green hydrogen or use similar technology to get to zero carbon emissions.

Included in the bill is a requiremen­t for Exelon to apply for any federal relief that’s available — there are several pending proposals in Washington that would help Exelon “essentiall­y recover, on behalf of the ratepayers, all the dollars that are being provided through the nuclear support program that we passed today,” state Sen. Bill Cunningham, D-Chicago, said Monday after passage of the legislatio­n.

The energy company planned to begin closing proceeding­s Monday for its Byron nuclear plant. The Dresden nuclear plant was slated to be taken offline in November.

The expected cost of the bill for ratepayers varies, with state Rep. Marcus Evans, D-Chicago, saying the figure residentia­l ratepayers would pay hovered around $3 more a month, but AARP released a study that claims the figure might be closer to $15.

The bill ends the controvers­ial formula rate system and transition­s to a “performanc­ebased” system that will be overseen by the Illinois Commerce Commission for utilities that serve more than 500,000 customers.

 ?? ANTHONY VAZQUEZ/SUN-TIMES ?? Gov. J.B. Pritzker and first lady MK Pritzker join state legislator­s holding up the Climate and Equitable Jobs Act on Wednesday at the Shedd Aquarium after the governor signed the bill.
ANTHONY VAZQUEZ/SUN-TIMES Gov. J.B. Pritzker and first lady MK Pritzker join state legislator­s holding up the Climate and Equitable Jobs Act on Wednesday at the Shedd Aquarium after the governor signed the bill.
 ?? AP FILES ?? Exelon was planning to begin closing proceeding­s for nuclear plants in Byron (above) and Dresden until the new energy bill was passed.
AP FILES Exelon was planning to begin closing proceeding­s for nuclear plants in Byron (above) and Dresden until the new energy bill was passed.

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