Comment from Trimmer, Rosemary
• We applaud the Council for showing we need no new fossil-fueled power plants
and for proposing to meet the next 20 years of growing Northwest electric
demand with 5,800 average megawatts of new energy efficiency and 1,800 aMW
of new renewable energy. These excellent clean energy targets are attainable and
affordable, and must not be watered down. At this point, they are the least we
should expect. Lowering the conservation target, for example, would cost
Northwest residents money and jobs.
• This draft plan, if finalized, would stabilize global warming emissions but not
reduce them – not at all. It will not help achieve the carbon-reduction goals
already in place in Washington, Oregon and Montana. Instead of telling utilities
it’s OK to keep relying on dirty coal plants, the Council should chart a course to a
carbon-free future in which energy efficiency and renewable energy resources
replace the dirty power from the coal plants now providing about 23% of the
Northwest’s electricity. The plan should reflect the best and latest climate science
and be tailored to meeting regional carbon-reduction goals.
• While the Council cannot control the future costs of carbon emissions, its should contain a reasonable CO2 price forecast for utilities to use for planning and in
their ongoing operations. Otherwise utilities get the green light to keep running
their dirty coal plants just as they’re running them today, creating additional
pollution and continually worsening the climate threat.
• The conservation targets in the draft’s 5-year Action Plan are too low at 1,200
average megawatts – about what the region’s utilities are already getting. To meet
the draft plan’s 20-year target, utilities would have to average 1,450 aMW every
five years. Not only will our utilities have a lot of catching up to do after the
Action Plan period, but meeting only the lower 5-year goal would cost our region
$2 billion in lost savings and countless job opportunities.
• Council staff analyses confirm important new studies such as Bright Future and
The Power of Efficiency showing that we can affordably shut down the coal plants
now serving our region, start electrifying transportation, restore endangered
salmon, develop our abundant clean energy resources and revitalize our economy
in the process. The Northwest Power and Conservation Council needs to assure
that the power system fulfills its climate responsibilities while responsibly
meeting our energy needs.
Thank you for your consideration.