Muzi.com News Gallery Library Forum Celebrity Movies Chinastar Regions Channels
Set Home|Subscribe|Premium Home|MyMuzi

Home | Most-viewed Story | Most-viewed Coverage | Region | People | Time | Events | Business | Sports | Showbiz | IT | Politics | Military | Society | Education | Life | Health
  Muzi.com : Muzi (English) : News
  Schwarzenegger to veto renewable energy bills
Last updated: 2009-09-13


Schwarzenegger to veto renewable energy bills
2009-09-13

Category
Renewable Energy
Legislation
Climate Change
Time
Year
Nations
U.S.
City
Palo Alto
States
California
Category
Regions
County
Santa Clara County
People
Arnold Schwarzenegger
Category
2007
Source
(AP)

SACRAMENTO, Calif. - Gov. Arnold Schwarzenegger's office said Saturday that he would veto legislation requiring a third of California's energy to come from renewable sources by 2020, choosing instead to mandate the change through an executive order.

The Democratic bills that passed the state Legislature just before the end of the legislative session Friday would have set up the most aggressive renewable energy standards in the nation.

But they also sought to limit the amount of energy from sources such as wind, solar and geothermal that could come from out-of-state. Schwarzenegger and some energy producers said the legislation would set up too many regulatory hurdles.

"The poorly drafted, overly complex bills passed by the Legislature are protectionist schemes that will kill the solar industry in California and drive prices up like the failed energy deregulation of the late 1990s," Schwarzenegger's communications director, Matt David, said in a statement Saturday.

The governor's office didn't immediately explain how Schwarzenegger would implement the goals of the legislation through the executive order. Supporters worry that it would not have the same strength of law as the bills would have.

The Independent Energy Producers, which represents companies that provide 80 percent of California's renewable energy, opposed the legislation, despite having sought a higher standard.

Jan Smutny-Jones, the association's executive director, said some of the language in the bills would have limited the placement of solar plants in some areas of the state, threatening projects that are already underway and others that are expecting to get funding through the federal stimulus package.

"The bill basically is sort of a dog's breakfast of bad ideas in terms of how it moves us forward," he said.

Consumer advocates and environmental groups sought the limits on out-of-state power because they wanted the bulk of California's renewable energy to be generated within the state. They said it would help promote job growth.

Environment California urged Schwarzenegger to reconsider.

"Creating a hard mandate with the force of law behind it for this 33 percent-by-2020 goal is critical to meeting California's global warming goals, much championed by Gov. Schwarzenegger, as well as bringing upward of 200,000 green jobs to the state," the group's legislative director, Dan Jacobson, said.

The legislation would have allowed utilities to import renewable energy generated outside California as long as the power came from a plant that connects to California's electricity grid.

Utilities also could buy a limited number of credits from out-of-state producers of alternative energy as a way to promote the development of clean power, even though that power would not reach California markets.

Republicans said the restrictions could drive up energy costs for Californians by as much as $10 billion a year; A backer of the legislation, Sen. Joe Simitian, D-Palo Alto, said concerns over cost increases were being exaggerated.

California already has one of the most aggressive standards of the 31 states that require utilities to generate a certain amount of their power from renewable sources, according to the Arlington, Va.-based Pew Center on Global Climate Change.

In Hawaii, utilities must generate 40 percent of their power from renewable sources by 2030 -- a longer timeframe than the goal being debated in California.

California's investor-owned utilities also are legally required to generate at least 20 percent of their power from renewable sources by next year, but few are expected to meet that goal.

The California Public Utilities Commission also has said the state's utilities will need to build additional transmission lines and other infrastructure to move more renewable energy. Construction could cost $115 billion over 10 years.

Schwarzenegger sent legislators a detailed letter in May outlining his requirements for a renewable energy standard, including protection for utility ratepayers, removing barriers to building more transmission lines and creating a healthy energy market.

___

On the Net:

Read the bills, SB14 and AB64, at http://www.senate.ca.gov and http://www.assembly.ca.gov

 Climate Change   Arnold Schwarzenegger 
  Profile News1006Gallery1Links  
  Obama to attend beginning of U.N. climate meeting (2009-11-25)
  Official: Obama going to Copenhagen climate summit (2009-11-25)
  Obama: Rally the world for climate deal next month (2009-11-17)
  Genetic tests help track food web, climate change (2009-11-09)
  Copenhagen failure would be 'suicide': Maldives (2009-11-09)
  Climate talks set to hand major problems to Copenhagen (2009-11-06)
  Senate Democrats advance climate bill without GOP (2009-11-05)
  EU leaders clear major hurdle to reform treaty (2009-10-29)
  Multiyear Arctic ice is effectively gone: expert (2009-10-29)
  US, China open high-level trade talks (2009-10-28)
  Envoy: No China-US climate pact from Obama visit (2009-10-28)
  Obama team: US needs bill to lead in clean energy (2009-10-27)
  AP IMPACT: Statisticians reject global cooling (2009-10-26)
  Poll: US belief in global warming is cooling (2009-10-22)
  Copenhagen climate talks could fail: US special envoy (2009-10-17)
  Arctic ice cap to disappear in 20-30 years: study (2009-10-14)
  Experts warn glaciers in Indian Kashmir melting (2009-10-14)
  NASA to begin massive climate survey of Antarctica (2009-10-08)
  Global economic crisis to slash carbon emissions: IEA (2009-10-06)
  Gov't to consumers: break on winter heating costs (2009-10-06)
  For some, US remains villain at UN climate talks (2009-10-01)
  Ten percent of world's major species 'at threat' (2009-09-29)
  New Mekong species at risk from climate change: WWF (2009-09-25)
  Obama to world: Don't expect America to fix it all (2009-09-23)
  'The Age of Stupid': a wakeup call on climate (2009-09-19)
Related People
  • Al Gore
  • Richard Kelly
  • Michael Moore
  • George W. Bush
  • Bill Clinton
  • Ken Loach
  • Helena Bonham Carter
  • Irwin Winkler
  • John Cameron
  • Jerry Falwell
  • Rudolph Giuliani
  • Richard Linklater
  • Oliver Stone
  • Shintaro Ishihara
  • Justin Timberlake
  • Related Events
  • 2006 Cannes Film Festival
  • Cannes Film Festival
  • U.S. Bush Admin.
  • 2005 Hurricane Katrina
  • Second Gulf War

  • Stories Coverages

    NewsGuide EventCityPeopleShowCompany 
     ENTSportsBIZEDULifeMilitaryPoliticsSocietyHealth 
    [Afghan Terror War]: Obama expects support for more Afghanistan troops (09:08 11/25)


    [2008 U.S. Layoff Crisis]: Weekly jobless claims drop below 500,000 (09:08 11/25)


    [2008 U.K. Recession]: Britain is last major nation in recession (09:08 11/25)


    [2009 GM Bankruptcy]: GM grapples with Saab, Opel futures (09:08 11/25)


    [2009 Swine Flu]: Millions begin hajj amid swine flu fears (09:08 11/25)


    [2009 Iran Election]: Iran detains scores of students, rights group says (09:08 11/25)


    [Large Hadron Collider]: Big Bang machine achieves first particle collisions (09:09 11/25)

    [2008 U.S. Real Estate Crisis]: October U.S. new home sales seen rising 2 percent (09:08 11/25)

    [2008 U.S. Recession]: U.S. consumer spending rises, jobless claims tumble (09:08 11/25)

    [Israel-Palestine]: Israel set to declare settlement limits: government sources (09:08 11/25)



    Muzi.com

    Muzi.com : About | Sitemap | Ads | Contact
    All Rights Reserved 1994-2006 - All rights reserved.