California utilities get green mandate


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California 33% Renewable Energy Mandate drives utilities to source power from solar, wind, and other clean energy by 2020, boosting investment, jobs, and air quality while sparking debate over electricity rates and grid reliability.

 

What This Means

California law requiring 33% renewable electricity by 2020, driving clean energy investment, jobs, and air quality.

  • Requires 33% renewable power portfolio by 2020
  • Expands solar, wind, and other clean energy procurement
  • Aims to cut emissions and improve California air quality
  • Supporters cite investor confidence and clean-tech jobs

 

Gov. Jerry Brown signed legislation requiring California utilities to get one-third of their power from renewable sources, giving the state the most aggressive alternative energy mandate in the U.S.

 

California utilities and other electricity providers have until the end of 2020 to draw 33 percent of their power from solar panels, windmills and other renewable sources.

Brown signed the solar power bill at a solar panel manufacturing plant near San Jose.

"There are people who think we can drill our way to happiness and prosperity," the Democratic governor told hundreds of plant workers and other supporters gathered to witness the signing. "Instead of just taking oil from thousands of miles away, we're taking the sun and converting it."

Previous California law required utilities to get 20 percent of their power from renewable sources.

Supporters of the higher standard said it will reassure investors and keep money flowing to develop alternative energy sources, as utilities look to buy more solar across California today. They say that will lead to cleaner air and job growth in the clean-energy sector.

Critics of the legislation said sticking with traditional energy sources such as coal and natural gas would be cheaper, keeping costs down for business and residential ratepayers. Business groups point to estimates that the higher standard could drive up electricity costs for California ratepayers by more than 7 percent, citing big costs in similar plans, despite language in the legislation to limit cost increases.

"Industry in California already pays electricity rates about 50 percent higher than the rest of the country," said Gino Di-Caro, spokesman for the California Manufacturers and Technology Association. "With 33 percent, those rates are going to go up even more."

Brown said he would look carefully at whether the new standard will drive up electricity costs but said increasing use of renewable sources makes sense for California and the country, amid concerns about exported energy policies elsewhere in the West.

"I know one thing: Being dependent on foreign fossil fuel is not good for our economy, it's not good for our security, and it's not good for our climate," the Democratic governor told The Associated Press in a telephone interview. "We have to be bold."

Making California less reliant on fossil fuels will benefit the state's air quality and make oil supply a smaller factor in America's foreign policy, said state Sen. Joe Simitian, who carried the legislation.

The Democrat from Palo Alto was instrumental in setting the current renewable power standard at 20 percent and has been working for four years to get the increase to 33 percent.

Republican Gov. Arnold Schwarzenegger vetoed renewable energy bills but later boosted a clean energy plan with an executive order that called for 33 percent renewable power by 2020. Simitian kept pushing to get the higher standard written into state law, which is harder to undo than an executive order.

When his bill died on the Senate floor as the 2010 legislative session ended, Simitian said the action sent a chill through the renewable power generation market. Supporters said the new bill sends a clear signal to financial backers that demand for renewable power will keep growing.

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