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Energy In the NewsThe Cincinnati Enquirer - 8/24/2007
Group would mandate source of energy in Ohio
COLUMBUS - Ohio can revive its sinking manufacturing industry and decrease its dependence on coal if the state requires a portion of electricity to be produced from renewable energy sources such as wind, said a report released Thursday. The report by the nonprofit group Environment Ohio calls on Gov. Ted Strickland and lawmakers to bring a state awash in carbon-emitting coal into a growing U.S. and world competition to attract new energy technologies. Environmental advocates, labor representatives and renewable energy business leaders said Ohio cannot afford to continue falling behind in a movement that has seen 25 states enact a requirement for the use of such technologies to produce electricity. Illinois, for example, recently passed a standard requiring 25 percent of its electricity to come from renewable sources by 2025. "Ohio is sitting on the sidelines," said Amy Gomberg, environmental advocate for Environment Ohio. Ohio ranks fourth in the nation in the amount of carbon dioxide pollution - which many scientists say is the primary cause of man-made global warming. Using wind to supply 20 percent of Ohio's electricity by 2020 would create a net total of 3,100 permanent full-time jobs and reduce carbon emissions as much as taking 2 million cars off the road, according to the report. Strickland, a Democrat, will soon release a wide-ranging energy plan that will update a 1999 law that made changes to the power industry. He views requirements for renewable energy as inseparable from a comprehensive change in energy laws, said his energy adviser, Mark Shanahan. But some in the Republican-controlled Legislature, as well as certain lobbying groups such as the Ohio Manufacturers Association, believe alternative energy should be a separate issue from the pressing challenge of reforming the electricity industry before it becomes deregulated on Jan. 1, 2009. "When it comes to current electric issues, it's complicated enough that adding other issues to this debate can only muddy the waters," said Rep. John Hagan, an Alliance Republican who chairs the House Public Utilities Committee. Advocates for renewable energy hope the environmental and economic benefits of energy from wind, sun and biofuels such as ethanol will attract lawmakers from both sides of the aisle in a state that has lost a quarter of its manufacturing jobs since 2000. "We believe this to be a great opportunity to put politics aside, not only to address electric restructuring and regulation but also advanced energy," said Tim Burga, chief of staff for the Ohio AFL-CIO. The state gets 87 percent of its electricity from burning coal, and imports 60 percent of its power plant fuel supplies from other states, the report said. All sides acknowledge that the state will continue to use coal, but they argue that energy supplies need to be drastically diversified. Should the Democratic-controlled Congress impose a cap or tax on carbon emissions, a coal-intensive state such as Ohio would be further buried economically, the report said. Click Here to read the story of the Enquirer's website
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