Clean energy requirements under consideration by the?Colorado State Legislature?would require some utilities to increase energy from renewable sources by 150 percent, Tracey writes, which would result in higher electricity costs.
This content provided by a Monitor sponsor. What's this?In this tough economy, Colorado?s electricity must be produced at a price that families and small businesses can afford. Which is why SB 13-252, being considered by the Colorado State Legislature, is a step in the wrong direction. The bill would require some utilities to increase energy from renewable sources by 150%, which would result in higher electricity costs.
Skip to next paragraph Evan TraceySenior Vice President for Communications, American Coalition for Clean Coal Electricity (ACCCE)
Mr. Tracey oversees the strategy on how to communicate the importance of electricity from coal and the value of investments in clean coal technology. He has two decades of political, legislative and issue research experience and has provided strategic media analysis for a number of trade associations, foundations, Fortune 500 companies, political party committees, the national press, academic institutions, as well as hundreds of national, statewide and local political campaigns.
Recent posts
' +
google_ads[0].line2 + '
' +
google_ads[0].line3 + '
Subscribe Today to the Monitor
Interestingly, SB 13-252 was introduced without consulting the consumers that will pay for this mandate, and the cost of compliance would be hundreds of millions, if not billions of dollars?having a potentially devastating effect on many Colorado communities.
According to the?Pueblo Chieftain:??Colorado?s rural electric cooperatives are currently required, by the year 2020, to provide 10% of their power using select renewable resources ? a reasonable standard these not-for-profit, consumer-owned utilities agreed to in 2007. With co-ops aggressively adding new renewable resources in an effort to meet and even exceed this standard, new mandates are neither fair nor necessary.
And yet Senate Bill 13-252, sponsored by Colorado Springs Senator John Morse ? along with Senator Gail Schwartz from Pitkin County ? would increase the standard to 25% ? more than doubling the current requirement while keeping the 2020 deadline for compliance in place.?
As we learned last year during a visit to western Colorado, in two small towns, cutting even 150 jobs would be devastating. Just ask the residents of Nucla and Naturita, Colorado. These towns rely heavily on the jobs from a nearby coal mine and coal-fueled power plant for their livelihood.
If you live in Colorado,?click here?to ask your legislator to support affordable and reliable electricity and tell them that government should not mandate higher electricity costs without considering economic impacts this bill would have on Colorado families and small businesses.
The Monitor allows its sponsoring partners to connect directly with Monitor readers by including content on CSMonitor.com. Sponsored content is always clearly labeled?and is written, edited, and produced by the sponsor. Questions? E-mail us.
adele lyrics best new artist 2012 grammys foo fighters nikki minaj album of the year grammy red carpet
No comments:
Post a Comment
Note: Only a member of this blog may post a comment.