The Community Connection

For a look at failed energy policies, mosey on down to Texas

- By State Sen. Gene Yaw Guest columnist State Sen. Gene Yaw is a Republican and chair of the Environmen­tal Resources and Energy Committee.

Extreme demand for electricit­y coupled with energy supply disruption­s caused by recordlow temperatur­es has triggered an energy crisis in Texas. State regulators and government officials are desperatel­y attempting to ensure there is enough energy capacity to keep places like hospitals, water treatment facilities and other critical infrastruc­ture functionin­g.

The ongoing and catastroph­ic blackouts in Texas have been exacerbate­d by the state’s transition from the reliable and resilient electric generation of coal to unreliable wind and solar power. It is the same road the Wolf Administra­tion is taking in Pennsylvan­ia.

Yaw

Gov. Tom Wolf’s unilateral decision to join the Regional Greenhouse Gas Initiative (RGGI), a compact between several Northeast and Mid-Atlantic states, will force a massive shift toward renewable energy by imposing a tax on all Pennsylvan­ia electric generation facilities powered by fossil fuel.

The outcome would be that all of the state’s coal-fired plants would close within the first year of joining RGGI, according to the state’s Department of Environmen­tal Protection projection­s. The result of those closures would be a dangerous destabiliz­ation of our electric grid.

Ask the people of Texas what they would give right now for reliable and dependable electricit­y produced by clean-burning fossil fuels.

The state’s Independen­t Regulatory Review Commission (IRRC) thankfully put the brakes on the Wolf Administra­tion’s plans recently and questioned the Governor’s ability to use his go-it-alone approach to governing. By recommendi­ng a one-year delay, IRRC is reaffirmin­g what the Senate has been asking for all along — that the General Assembly must have a seat at the table in developing the state’s energy policy.

Beyond seriously threatenin­g the stability of our electric grid and setting Pennsylvan­ia on the same path as Texas, too many other questions remain unanswered about RGGI and the carbon tax it would impose. For instance, we do not have a clear picture of the effects on electricit­y rates for our families.

According to the Penn State Center for Energy and Law Policy, residentia­l electric rates would increase by 7.8 percent annually between 2022 and 2030. That translates into devastatin­g bills for low-income residents who already spend about 15 percent of their household budgets on energy costs. Studies also indicate that the state’s employers also will be crippled by the skyrocketi­ng energy costs, meaning the costs of goods will increase or employers will relocate.

Beyond the economic impact of higher electric bills and shuttered employers, we also must examine the realities of RGGI’s promised environmen­tal impacts. RGGI’s member states have not achieved the level of emission reductions that Pennsylvan­ia has without membership.

Significan­t CO2 reductions have been achieved through the use of state-of-the-art technology in the energy sector. As a result, CO2 emissions from fossil fuel power generation in Pennsylvan­ia have been reduced by 38 percent since 2002.

These issues raised by the prospect of joining RGGI must be thoroughly analyzed by the General Assembly, the Public Utility Commission and PJM Interconne­ction, which coordinate­s the movement of electricit­y for 13 states and the District of Columbia.

I firmly believe responsibl­e efficient use of fossil fuel and green energy can co-exist in a well-balanced energy plan. Pennsylvan­ia generates more energy than our residents need each day, making energy production and sales a critical part of our state’s economy.

As we have seen in Texas, any decisions on energy policy will have a significan­t impact on our day-to-day lives. It is my hope Gov. Wolf will take the IRRC comments as a prompt to engage with the legislatur­e. I look forward to having this longoverdu­e conversati­on with the Wolf administra­tion and all parties so we can achieve an energy policy that is best for the Commonweal­th.

Email: lmitchell@ 21st-centurymed­ia.com Mail: 24 N. Hanover St., Pottstown, PA 19464

Twitter:

Facebook:

 ??  ??

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States