I'm not sure how many of you are aware, but there is currently a bill (House Bill 298) that has been proposed which will eliminate the NC Renewable Energy Portfolio Standard (REPS). REPS was created under Senate Bill 3 in 2007 and garnered a near unanimous vote. The standard legislated a certain percentage of our states total energy production which must be created by renewable sources i.e. photovoltaic panels, geothermal, solar thermal, hydro electric, wind turbines, biomass, wave/current energy etc. Eventually, investor-owned utility companies in NC will be required to produce 12.5% of their electricity from renewable sources. Private utility companies will need to eventually produce 10%. Currently the required levels are set at 3%, but will increase annually until 2018. North Carolina is the only Southeastern state to have a REPS Plan and since its creation have become the fifth leading solar state in the country and generated $1.4 billion in the industry. Community College programs have been created to train a new and growing work force and the renewable energy industry has begun moving to our state to take advantage of this growing market. It has also been of great benefit to the agricultural community who has been able to convert land into solar farms.House Bill 298, will stop all of this. It will put people out of business. It will establish Duke Power as the reigning energy monopoly and prevent new renewable technologies from being developed and implemented. I am a builder and know several contractors who this will directly impact. I also know a number of soon to graduate college students who are being told that hiring freezes have been implemented until this all shakes out. This is a huge step backwards for our state, but it is getting very little media coverage.Opponents of REPS claim that it is a subsidy for renewable energies which should be eliminated and claim that it only increases the utility bills of NC residents.I wanted to post this here to inform everyone and also to encourage conversation on both sides of the argument.http://www.wral.com/renewables-rollb...ouse/12300092/http://energync.org/blog/ncsea-news/...ergy-industry/
4/18/2013 7:45:38 PM
Call me when you need help with the recall or the revolution.
4/18/2013 8:14:58 PM
Jesus, how is it possible that a corrupt Democratic administration for decades was still SO MUCH BETTER than these Republicans? WTF? Really? It's like all they spend their time on is undoing things, and dragging us backwards thirty years.This is fucking embarrassing.
4/18/2013 8:53:12 PM
Links are dead
4/18/2013 10:07:42 PM
I thought it was interesting when I heard the Duke spokesman asked about it on NPR he was like "we really didn't ask for this and we are meeting our targets..." and I believed him. Why would a company build a 5-10 year plan (since the original bill was 2007) on a bet that this bill would pass?[Edited on April 18, 2013 at 10:25 PM. Reason : ^^ i think the democrats had to at least be sneaky with their bullshit not "you take it & like it"]
4/18/2013 10:13:54 PM
4/19/2013 9:08:01 AM
Agreed, this was a good, bipartisan idea at the time it passed and it still is.
4/19/2013 9:13:49 AM
4/19/2013 9:16:18 AM
4/19/2013 9:21:42 AM
^exactly, you can craft rules that eventually become too onerous, and suddenly industry is fleeing as fast as possible. But if the rules are simple and relatively easy to meet, and if businesses realize they need to head that direction regardless, then suddenly it is an attractor. At least until we actually get a more meaningful federal policy.not that I'm happy about it. I'd much prefer us throwing as much weight as possible behind renewables. But still, baby steps count and are MUCH MUCH better than going backwards.Also its questionable that coal is cheaper than renewables after you factor in the effects of coal ash, carbon, mercury etc that coal power is leaving us with. If we could factor in those externalities, suddenly coal isn't looking so appetizing.[Edited on April 19, 2013 at 9:31 AM. Reason : .]
4/19/2013 9:28:32 AM
4/19/2013 4:06:05 PM
This is a post about RPS from an industry lobbying group blog. I think they're oil focused, but honestly I don't remember.http://energytomorrow.org/blog/fact-vs-fiction-on-the-renewable-fuel-standard1/#/type/all
4/19/2013 7:47:41 PM
Republicans are great.
4/20/2013 7:21:26 AM
As an ex-Republican, I agree
4/20/2013 12:03:54 PM
^^ that article is about ethanol vs gasoline which has nothing to do with REPSREPS concerns using sustainable technologies for electricity productionI. E. geothermal, solar thermal, photovoltaics, combined heat and power (CHP), hydro etc.
4/20/2013 6:45:57 PM
4/22/2013 9:54:18 AM
I don't know where the $0.42 figure comes from but I do have this:an RTI study on NC REPS:http://energync.org/assets/files/RTI%20Study%202013.pdfhttp://www.southernstudies.org/2013/02/study-details-economic-benefits-of-north-carolinas-threatened-clean-energy-program.htmlLooks like its a pretty good return on investment, IMO
4/22/2013 11:23:13 AM
^sounds like a successful program.Yeah I hear ya, they mentioned closing plants.Sounds like a successful program, thanks for the info!
4/22/2013 1:19:30 PM
And dead!
4/24/2013 3:15:10 PM
4/24/2013 3:30:51 PM
So, to be clear, the bill is dead...not the REPS program, right?
4/24/2013 4:43:20 PM
The bill is dead.
4/24/2013 4:46:08 PM
Sweet. So how many of these bills have the Republicans put forth that are ass backwards only to be shut down after public outcry brought the idiocy to their attention?
4/24/2013 4:49:19 PM
Who knows? Some chucklehead yesterday said that they will try and bring back the "nipple bill" at some point....
4/24/2013 4:52:22 PM
Just got word from one who was at the legislative building today. The vote passed 18 to 13 in favor of the REPS bill. The Renewable Energy Plan shall remain in effect.
4/24/2013 4:53:14 PM
Good. I'm fairly conservative (not a registered republican), however I do NOT agree with a lot of the shit coming out of the NC legislature lately. I don't care who you are... it is in everyone's best interest to phase in renewable energy and other domestic resources so our collective nuts won't remain in OPEC's vice grip. (this includes domestic fossil fuel as well)
4/25/2013 9:31:04 AM
^
4/25/2013 9:52:00 AM
it's a shame this got shut down. When Duke joins PJM, we'd be able to sell our solar RECs to New Jersey and Maryland at highe rates instead of having to squander them here.The only good part of the NC REPS program is the energy efficiency credits. It's about time we started giving incentives to commercial and industrial facilities that use CHP technologies to reduce fuel consumption. The specific requirements for solar and animal waste incinerators are bullshit and need to be done away with.
4/28/2013 8:26:22 PM
^CHP is included under the REPS plan and also qualifies for NC tax rebates for both commercial and residential
4/30/2013 12:36:15 PM
and Europe was giving incentives on CHP and biogas installations 20+ years ago. Meanwhile, we chased wind and solar boondoggles.
4/30/2013 5:12:32 PM
Looks like Rep. Hagar somehow managed to keep this bill afloat for one more vote http://energync.org/blog/ncsea-news/2013/04/29/reps-repeal-bill-falters-and-fails-but-hager-drags-it-back
4/30/2013 8:20:51 PM