Madison, Wisconsin committed to getting 100 percent
of its energy from clean, renewable sources in a resolution passed
unanimously by the City Council on Tuesday. It became the 24th city to
make such a promise, according to a tally by the Sierra Club, which has a
“Ready for 100” nationwide campaign.
Madison’s resolution sets
a high bar in a state that gets most of its electricity from coal and
where, as in most places, natural gas is almost exclusively used for
heating during harsh winters.
Madison’s resolution calls for the entire
city to get all of its power from clean renewable sources, starting
with city operations. There is no target date specified, but the
resolution mandates that a plan to get the city government’s operations
to all-renewable must be developed by January 2018, including specific
dates and benchmarks. The resolution calls this process a “budgetary and
managerial priority.”
“The community (citywide) goal hopefully
will be realistic, we’ve had our partners at the table and will continue
to do so,” said Zach Wood, a City Council member who spearheaded the
resolution. “The reason we have two separate goals is we want the city
to be a leader — not just tell our neighbors what to do but walk the
walk, and make sure we get there first.”
The resolution allocates up to $250,000
for a planning process wherein the city will engage a consultant to
develop different options for moving forward. The money comes from
$750,000 for sustainability improvements already enshrined in the 2017
budget.
“That’s not the easy part but it’s the
cheap part,” said Wood. The city will need to continue allocating money
in future years to carry out its own energy transition and provide
support for private citizens and businesses.
While the resolution is largely
non-binding, it mandates the plan be developed and regular reports on
progress to the City Council. The 100 percent goal will be written into a
revised version of the city’s sustainability plan, and will be overseen
by the Sustainable Madison Committee, made up of 18 citizens appointed
by the mayor.
The plan due in January 2018 “will give people a sense (of) what the building blocks are and how they might arrange them,” said
Sustainable Madison Committee chair Raj Shukla. “We’ll give
policymakers as much flexibility as possible, and a very clear
understanding of what the tradeoffs are. There are real limitations on
what a city can do outside its operations. But what it can do is use its
bully pulpit, and encourage businesses, utilities and other entities to
follow suit.”
Utility buy-in
The city’s electricity is provided
primarily by the utility Madison Gas and Electric, with the utility
Alliant also serving some customers. MG&E’s portfolio includes
about 13 percent renewable energy, 48 percent coal-fired power, 9
percent gas and oil and 30 percent purchased from elsewhere. Advocates
and city leaders note that MG&E will be the key player in
determining how much of the city’s power comes from renewables.
MG&E officially endorsed the resolution, and has its own Energy Framework 2030 that calls for 30 percent renewables by 2030. MG&E recently announced plans for its largest wind farm to date, a 66-megawatt installation near Saratoga, Iowa.
New MG&E CEO Jeff Keebler was quoted in Wisconsin State Journal saying he could not commit to 100 percent renewables.
But MG&E spokesperson Dana Brueck
said the company is committed to working with the city to implement the
spirit of the resolution. Currently, the company’s Green Power Tomorrow program
lets customers buy electricity specifically from wind. A pilot program
launched last year letting customers purchase solar power is sold out
but will be expanded, Brueck said.
“We have ambitious renewable energy and
carbon reduction goals,” Brueck said. “If we can go further faster, we
will. Like the city, we’re looking to increase our use of renewable
resources and to reduce our reliance on coal.”
Advocates including the citizen group RePower Madison have in the past clashed with MG&E over
policies that they say are hostile to solar energy, including increases
in the fixed charges it levies on all customers regardless of how much
energy they consume from the grid.
RePower Madison organizer Mitch Brey
praised the utility for its involvement in the resolution process, and
called on the company to step up its commitment to renewables.
Brey added that Renewable Energy Credits
or similar credits purchased from elsewhere should not be used to meet
the 100 percent renewable goal.
“I don’t think it would be very satisfying for anyone if we met this goal by buying credits,” Brey said.
Popular support
The city government and individual
businesses, industries and homeowners can increase the city’s reliance
on renewable energy by building solar installations or small wind
turbines “behind the meter” on their own property, in some cases owned
by third parties through Power Purchase Agreements.
The utility’s rate policies help
determine how feasible it is for customers to install solar, with fixed
charges, interconnection requirements and other factors playing a major
role. In Wisconsin and across the country, renewable advocates note that
technology and economic forces are making solar increasingly
attractive.
“I think the biggest drivers are things
out of our control — the price of renewables is dropping dramatically,
the price of energy storage is dropping drastically, we’re seeing price
parity,” said Shukla. “That’s the kind of thing that will kick this into
high gear. We want to just start the ball rolling.”
Madison residents have voiced
overwhelming support for the resolution and renewable energy in general,
with crowds attending multiple hearings about the proposed resolution
and testifying in its favor.
“We’ve been working hard since last
summer to make the public aware of every entry point for participation
in the democratic process,” said Elizabeth Katt Reinders, a
Madison-based senior organizer for the Sierra Club’s Beyond Coal
campaign. “We’ve been thrilled to see what a huge response there has
been. That’s something we’re really proud of.”
A Sierra Club press release notes that on
the same day the resolution was passed by Madison, with its famously
progressive politics, the town of Abita Springs, Louisiana passed a
similar measure. Abita Springs voters favored Donald Trump in the
presidential election.
“Politics has nothing to do with it for
me,” said Abita Springs Mayor Greg Lemons in a statement. “Clean energy
just makes good economic sense. By establishing a 100 percent renewable
energy goal, we have an opportunity to use solar power that we can
control in our community, for our community.”
Other cities
committing to 100 percent renewable energy include San Diego, Los
Angeles, San Francisco and San Jose in California; Boulder, Pueblo and
Aspen in Colorado; Moab, Utah; Georgetown, Texas; Burlington, Vermont;
Rochester, Minnesota; and Grand Rapids and Traverse City, Michigan.
“You’ve seen other cities set really
aggressive goals, you kind of need those to push the envelope and bring
folks along,” said Kathy Kuntz, executive director of Cool Choices,
a Madison nonprofit that uses a gaming platform to help businesses
improve their sustainability. “If we can show that as a community
Madison thrives while we achieve this objective, that becomes an
important example for others.”
Gas, vehicles and other major challenges
Heating homes, businesses and public
institutions with clean, renewable energy will be a serious challenge
for Madison. Electric heating is typically much less efficient than
natural gas, and to be “clean” the electricity would need to come from
renewable sources.
Brey noted that biogas from manure
biodigesters and landfill gas collection systems could theoretically be
used for heating, as could geothermal energy, all sources that would be
considered renewable. Shukla said those options haven’t been discussed
as realistic possibilities thus far. He said increasing buildings’
energy efficiency — so that less gas is needed for heating — will be the
first step on the heating front.
On the transportation side, Shukla said
the city will look to electrify its own vehicle fleet, with the power
provided by the sun or wind.
Brey said that plans for citywide
transformation should be included in the planning process from the
start, even though the city’s immediate goals have to do with its own
operations.
“It shouldn’t be done in a silo, getting
city operations to 100 percent and then later figuring out how to do the
community as a whole,” he said.
Proponents say they are committed for the long haul.
“This is the first step of many,” said
Council member Wood. “Last night was great, we were extremely encouraged
and excited, but we need to capture this excitement and keep it going
when it comes time to put more money into this and realize our
commitments. This is long, long term. We’ll need to invest in and focus
on it every year, forever.”
source: http://midwestenergynews.com
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