By TIM FAULKNER/ecoRI.org News staff
PROVIDENCE — A new
energy advisory council is attempting to reshape the future of fuel use in
Rhode Island.
The council,
representing fossil-fuel and renewable-energy sectors, is devising a
sustainable energy supply strategy for homes, vehicles, businesses and power
plants. The goal is to create local jobs and manage price volatility while
reducing carbon emissions and cutting air pollution.
“This is a very
challenging task,” said Marion Gold, director of the Office of Energy (OER),
one of the state divisions overseeing the project.
The project received an endorsement from Gov. Lincoln Chafee, who rarely publicly backs specific energy programs involving renewable energy. “The planning process will address energy security, renewable-energy procurement and energy efficiency, as well as natural gas, heating oil and the transportation system, including electric vehicles and charging stations. There are promising economic opportunities in each of these areas,” Chafee stated in a press release.
Rather than call for a
switch to renewable energy, the initial vision of the project includes a vague
“environmentally sound” approach included with goals of safety, reliability,
affordability and sustainability.
Project manager Danny
Musher downplayed any expectations for a wholesale switch to renewable energy.
“I don’t think we want to pave the roads with solar panels immediately,” he
said.
Council members
discussed the merits and limitations of natural gas, transmission lines and
wind energy. They addressed climate change. “From what we are seeing in New
Jersey and New York, we should address climate change too,” said council member
Bob Chew, an energy consultant, at the group's meeting this week.
Climate change was a
touchy subject. “What I’m baffled by,” said Julie Gill, CEO of the Oil Heat
Institute of Rhode Island. "with all this discussion about carbon
emissions, why is methane off the table?”
Policy options will
look to influence renewable-energy programs, funding programs, land development
and business development. Gold said the state’s recently adopted
renewable-energy programs will benefit this new energy program.
The plan emulates
those created in Connecticut, Vermont, New Jersey, Washington and New York. The
new Vermont energy plan aims for 90 percent renewable energy by 2050.
New York spent $20
million on its plan. State planners expect the Rhode Island project to cost
much less. Federal economic stimulus money is expected to fund the project. The
University of Rhode Island, the Economic Development Corporation (EDC), and
energy groups and state agencies will advise.
A final draft of the
Rhode Island plan containing goals for 2015 and 2035 is due by March 2014. The
council will refer its proposals to a technical committee at the State Planning
Council, followed by public hearings and public comment. After the plan is
adopted, all municipalities will be obligated to add it to their comprehensive
plans.
Gold said the energy
plan won’t simply sit on a shelf. “We want to make sure this is an actionable
plan, but also something we can revisit year by year," she said.