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October 21, 2009

States Can Generate Their Own Renewable Energy To Meet Their RPS

by John Farrell, ILSR

U.S. states do not need to seek energy imports to meet their renewable energy goals. That's the conclusion of a new report from the 35-year-old Institute for Local Self-Reliance entitled Energy Self-Reliant States. The report finds a total of 31 states can serve all their electricity needs with in-state renewable power, and that every state could reach its renewable mandate with domestically available renewable resources.

The potential unveiled in this report means that many states can reach their renewable energy goals without waiting for a controversial new, nationwide, high-voltage transmission grid.  For example, every state west of the Mississippi could be self-sufficient in electricity with in-state renewable energy.  In the East, Virginia and the Carolinas, as well as Delaware, Massachusetts, Vermont, and Maine can also be self-sufficient with domestic renewable energy resources.  Other states in the Northeast, including Pennsylvania, New Jersey, and New York could get at least two-thirds of their electricity from in-state renewables rather than imports.

The goal of self-reliance is often cast in contrast to proposals for a nationwide transmission superhighway.  This new infrastructure has an estimated tab of $100-200 billion, and typically requires significant cost sharing for import states (such as New York, Massachusetts and others on the East Coast).  The rationale is that costs to generate wind and solar electricity are lower in the Great Plains and Southwest, respectively, than in other regions of the country.  The envisioned transmission network would send this renewable power to areas of high demand on the coasts.

However, the argument for long distance transmission runs up against the desire of many importing states to first harness their homegrown renewable energy before depending on imports.  This issue led the Governors of ten East Coast states, in May 2009, to write to senior members of Congress to protest that requiring their residents and businesses to pay billions of dollars for new transmission lines that would import electricity from the upper Midwest and Southwest into their region “could jeopardize our states’ efforts to develop wind resources….”.  They added, “it is well accepted that local generation is more responsive and effective in solving reliability issues than long distance energy inputs.”

In an Op Ed in the New York Times, Ian Bowles, Massachusetts Secretary of Energy and Environmental Affairs explained, “lawmakers should resist calls to add an extensive and costly new transmission system that would carry electricity from remote areas like Texas, the Great Plains and Eastern Canada to places with high energy demands like Boston, Chicago and New York… Renewable energy resources are found all across the country; they don’t need to be harnessed from just one place.”

This transmission preference also runs afoul of the economics of sending power long distances.  At $3 million a mile, a new transmission superhighway can outweigh the cost of local generation, especially when factors beyond the per kilo-watt hour price are included, from local jobs to economic impact.

The expanded Energy Self-Reliant States shows that states can meet their renewable energy needs with domestic onshore and offshore wind, rooftop solar PV, geothermal, combined-heat-and-power, and micro hydro.  Its 15 multi-colored maps allow the reader to quickly compare their state’s commercial renewable energy potential with that of other states and provide a clear illustration of the potential for dispersed renewable energy generation to shift states from import-dependence to energy self-reliance. 

The expanded second edition of Energy Self-Reliant States is available online at http://www.newrules.org/

John Farrell is a senior researcher on the New Rules Project at the Institute for Local Self-Reliance, where he examines the benefits of local ownership and dispersed generation of renewable energy.  His latest paper is the second and expanded edition of Energy Self Reliant States, illustrating the potential for every state to meet their renewable energy goals with in-state renewable energy sources. 

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The information and views expressed in this article are those of the author and not necessarily those of RenewableEnergyWorld.com or the companies that advertise on its Web site and other publications.

Reader Comments (4)
 
No image available
October 22, 2009
Only 31 states? If the study had included biomass-fired power plants, would it have been all 50 states? Why did they, I mean you, leave out biomass?
Comment 1 of 4
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Anonymous
October 23, 2009
Ian Bowles, Massachusetts Secretary of Energy and Environmental Affairs wants to create his own Kingdom through the Massachusetts Wind Energy Siting Reform Act. The act takes away property rights and has the worst setbacks for the safety of the general public. Ian is trying to avoid ant Federal legislation that would alter his and Gov Deval Patricks renewable energy plans.

The lack of renewable energy scam enforcement in Massachusetts by Attorney General Martha Coakley in the most recent case where a former State Representative had a few bad wind turbines ,left the state for Hawaii and never paid the 160 people who lost money on the wind turbines is an example why semi-quasi state agencies like the MTC, Massachusetts Technology Colaborative with boutique bank accounts need to be looked at !
Massachusetts Gov. Patrick lost big in renewable energy field. He sealed the deal by offering Evergreen more than $76 million in grants, land, loans, tax incentives, and other aid. It was one of the largest investments the state has ever made in the success of a private company. The stock is expected to become a penny stock within a few weeks '

Evergreen says it may be forced to downsize its new manufacturing plant, at the old Fort Devens Army base northwest of Boston. The company says it expects to burn through most of its $83 million in cash by year-end, and last month it persuaded the state to lend it another $5 million. Its stock, which peaked at nearly $19 per share in late 2007, closed at $1.83 yesterday.

The state of Massachusetts passed a 1.7 Billion dollar renewable energy bond last year. This is the money, state aid, that is being cut from cities and towns because of the blunder of the Patrick Administration!

Now the governor wants to take your residential property rights away through the Wind Energy Siting Reform Act.
Comment 2 of 4
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Anonymous
October 23, 2009
HOW IS MASSACHUSETTS SPENDING STIMULUS FUNDS ON RENEWABLE ENERGY?
This is how the commercial land based wind turbine scam works in Massachusetts today;

A . Your town wants a commercial wind turbine so the Massachusetts Technology Collaborative tells your town which company to hire for a meteorological tower wind test then if this fails the MTC gives you a company that will conduct a Sodar test which will get you the results you need .These tests are all paid for from the renewable energy tax from residential electric bills .The word extrapolation comes into play in the wind results .The problem is that the MTC posts all the studies for the last few years on the Internet . If you review the studies done for each town you will see the conflicts in the reports between towns.

B. The residents of Massachusetts caught the difference in the studies and confronted the studies and the the towns in court. The governor of Massachusetts upset that his commercial wind turbine projects have slowed to a crawl has the proposed the Massachusetts Wind Energy Siting Reform Act to take residential property rights!

C. Renewable Energy Magazine should write a story on the politics involved in Massachusetts with the political hacks stealing renewable energy funds or take someone like myself to court to bring to light what's going on in Massachusetts !
Comment 3 of 4
No image available
November 5, 2009
There is a very simple and efficient way to decide whether the money is better spent on a new inter-state transmission system or on more localized renewable energy. You could grow bananas in Alaska with enough subsidies, and you might create some new jobs for Alaskans in the process. But why not grow bananas in Hawaii and ship them? End these idiotic political barriers and focus on the option which will provide the cheapest electricity rates.
Comment 4 of 4
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