|
|
Energy Reports
Search
•
RSS Feed
|
Reaping the Rewards: How State Renewable Energy Standards Are Cutting Pollution, Saving Money, Creating Jobs and Fueling a Clean Energy Boom
1/22/2008
Reaping-the-Rewards-of-an-RPS.pdf
|
Executive Summary
Renewable energy in the United States is on the rise. America now
generates twice as much electricity from the wind and the sun as we did
just four years ago, and 2007 promises to be another year of record
growth. The renewable energy boom is the result of a series of
federal and state policies designed to promote cleaner sources of
electricity, as well as technological improvements that have reduced
the cost of renewable energy over the last three decades, rising fossil
fuel prices, and increased concern about global warming. Renewable
electricity standards (RES), which require increasing percentages of
the electricity supplied to consumers to come from renewable resources,
have been among the most important factors in encouraging the
development of renewable energy. Twenty-five states and the
District of Columbia have adopted an RES. And while many of those
policies are in their infancy, RES states have already begun to reap
the benefits in increased renewable energy development, reduced
pollution, cost savings and economic growth. The 25 states that have adopted an RES are leading the nation in renewable energy development. - Approximately
54 percent of the electricity consumed in the United States is in
states with RES policies.2 States with RES programs, however, account
for 75 percent of America’s renewable energy generating capacity.
- In
2006, more than two-thirds of all new renewable electric generating
capacity in the United States was built in RES states. The same is
likely to hold true in 2007, with more than 70 percent of planned
renewable generation capacity expected to be built in RES states. (RES
policies also spur renewable energy development in nearby states, while
some renewable energy built in RES states is spurred by other public
policies.)
- Renewable energy will make up a larger proportion of
new power generation in RES states in 2007 than in states without RES
policies. In 2007, renewabl electricity generators account for about 38
percent of planned capacity additions in RES states, compared to just
12 percent in non-RES states.
- Of the top 20 utilities with
long-term contracts for wind power in the United States, 17 of them are
covered in whole or in part by RES policies.
- While many public
policies have contributed to the growth of renewable energy, the RES
has played an important role. The U.S. Department of Energy estimates
that RES policies contributed to the construction of about half of the
wind energy added in the United States between 2001 and 2006, with the
share increasing to 60 percent in 2006.
State RES policies are reducing pollution and saving natural resources. - Renewable
energy sources built after the adoption of state RES policies reduce
America’s global warming emissions by approximately 8.4 million metric
tons per year, the equivalent of taking more than 1.5 million cars off
America’s roads.
- Renewable generators in RES states also
produce fewer emissions of health threatening pollutants that
contribute to the formation of smog and soot than fossil fuel
generators. Renewable energy, therefore, can reduce the overall cost of
complying with federal limits on these pollutants and make it more
possible to set tighter limits that are more protective of human health
in the future.
- Renewable generators in RES states also save
vast amounts of water — approximately 1.2 billion gallons per year.
Renewable energy development in RES states is boosting local economies.
- Over
the last two years, several of the world’s leading manufacturers of
wind turbines and solar panels have either built new manufacturing
facilities or expanded existing facilities in the United States. RES
policies play an important role in luring manufacturing facilities, as
they represent a long-term commitment to build the market for renewable
energy technologies. Colorado, Pennsylvania, Oregon, Texas, and
Massachusetts are among the RES states that have experienced increases
in renewable energy manufacturing activity in recent years.
- Renewable
energy development in RES states has had ripple effects that extend
across the nation. Increased demand for renewable energy creates
increased demand for raw materials, construction, accounting,
engineering and a wide variety of services. While the benefits of
renewable energy are strongest in local economies near manufacturing
facilities and renewable energy installations, every state in the
nation has at least one business that participates in the renewable
energy economy and benefits from its growth.
- Renewable
energy has had particular benefits for rural economies. Texas
landowners, for example, now receive an estimated $9.5 million in
royalty payments from wind farm operators, while one town in rural
Colorado saw its tax base increase by 29 percent as a result of a wind
farm development there.
State RES policies also have the potential to save electricity consumers money. - A
2007 analysis by the energy research firm, Wood MacKenzie estimated
that adoption of a 15 percent federal renewable electricity standard
would save more than $100 billion in electricity costs by 2026, largely
by driving down the cost of natural gas.
- In many states, such
as Colorado and Washington, wind farms have proven to be the least-cost
source of electricity, especially when all the likely future costs of
fossil fuel-fired power plants are included (such as the risk of energy
price spikes and the future cost of carbon dioxide emissions).
- Solar
power, while currently more expensive than other forms of power
generation, can play an important role in reducing demand for power at
peak periods, when it is most expensive.
- Renewable energy
development reduces upward pressure on natural gas prices. A 2005 study
by researchers at the Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory estimated
that the 18 state RES policies then in effect would produce savings of
approximately $10 billion in lower natural gas bills as a result of
reduced demand for natural gas.
Adoption of a national RES would increase the benefits of renewable energy to the environment and the economy. - The
United States should adopt a renewable electricity standard that calls
for 25 percent of America’s electricity to come from new renewable
sources by 2025.
- States that have not yet adopted RES policies
should consider doing so, while those that have adopted RES policies
should consider strengthening them by increasing the required
percentage of renewable energy, excluding nonrenewable or polluting
energy sources, and refining their policies to ensure that renewable
energy targets are met.
- The state and federal governments
should also adopt complementary policies to hasten the deployment of
renewable energy along with policies to improve the energy efficiency
of the American economy.
|