Governors, premiers talk energy


NFPA 70b Training - Electrical Maintenance

Our customized live online or in‑person group training can be delivered to your staff at your location.

  • Live Online
  • 12 hours Instructor-led
  • Group Training Available
Regular Price:
$699
Coupon Price:
$599
Reserve Your Seat Today

Hydro-Quebec power and US-Canada energy frame cross-border trade, renewable energy policy, electricity imports, and NGA talks as governors and Canadian premiers weigh contracts, wind power, and recognition of large-scale hydro.

 

Understanding the Story

Hydro-Quebec electricity to Vermont anchors trade and renewable policy, debated by governors and Canadian premiers.

  • Vermont negotiates new Hydro-Quebec contracts
  • Debate: classify large hydro as US renewable energy
  • NGA meeting includes Canadian premiers for first time
  • Energy mix: hydro, wind power, petroleum production
  • Governors urge action amid federal health care gridlock

 

Energy and health care reform efforts are at center stage in the meeting of the National Governors Association in large part because Gov. James Douglas, the chairman of the organization, believes they should be.

 

The lack of action so far on a federal health care bill gave the governors a chance to talk about what their states have done and where they are headed.

But potentially just as important to Vermont, the governors and their Canadian counterparts talked about their trade relationship – based largely on energy, including renewable power cooperation, such as electricity generated at Hydro-Quebec that is exported to Vermont. It was the first time the premiers of Canada's provinces officially joined the governors for part of their meeting. Later the annual reception for governors was hosted by the Canadian embassy, one more way Douglas sought to strengthen the relationship.

Canadian power and whether it is counted as a renewable source of electricity in the United States – as New England eyes Canadian power in current policy – and gets the economic benefits that come from that designation – was the first topic brought up at the meeting between Canadian premiers and the governors.

"We sell clean, renewable hydroelectricity to our neighbors," said Quebec Premier Jean Charest. "We should seize that opportunity."

"There should be a recognition that large-scale hydro should be renewable energy. It is renewable energy," he said. (And by the way, "Thank you for an opportunity to be somewhere where there is snow," he concluded.)

Vermont utilities are now negotiating with Hydro-Quebec on new contracts for power, as governments and utilities pursue broader energy solutions statewide. The current contracts, which expire over the next few years, supply a third of the state's needs.

"Whether the next contract is a good economic deal, we are still working on," Douglas told Charest. "I am sure it will be."

Energy dominated the discussion between the chief executives, but it wasn't just about hydroelectricity. Canada produces a huge amount of wind power, and produces and refines massive amounts of petroleum as well, with Quebec-Alberta energy partnership talks highlighting cross-provincial strategies.

Holding the chairmanship – as three of the last four governors have – also means his job in the NGA is different, Douglas said during a break between meetings. As the head of the bipartisan group of governors, which takes its official positions by consensus, amid clean energy commitments now underway, he is also less vocal in his own views than he would otherwise be, he said.

"Coal-producing states have views on energy that are quite different than mine," Douglas said. But as chairman – a term that lasts until July – "I don't inject my own personal views as much... as tempted as I might be."

The National Governors Association is designed to help state chief executives build relationships, including regional energy cooperation efforts, discuss how they deal with common problems and prepare an agenda for lobbying on Capitol Hill.

The role of governors, their shared issues and the fact that the NGA is bipartisan means it is far less political – at least publicly – than the governors' Congressional counterparts. So while there are also meetings of the Republican Governors Association and the Democratic Governors Association to talk political strategy it is – usually – hard to tell by what they say what party those attending NGA are.

The difference in approach when compared with Congress was the source of several jokes by the governors.

"We will be taking off our partisan political hats, which we do better than any organization in the country," said Gov. Joe Manchin of West Virginia.

Gov. Brian Schweitzer of Montana was more pointed in his criticism of Congress, which meets just down the road from where the governors convened.

"In the states we educate, medicate and incarcerate," he said. "In Congress we talk about it."

"The only time they listen to us is when we come to town and, by the way, Congress is out of town," Schweitzer concluded.

Part of that tension comes from perpetual differences between executives and legislators and part of it is equally long-standing differences between state and federal governments, especially on the national electrical grid and infrastructure policy.

But some that tension this year also seemed to come from frustration over lack of action in Congress – particularly on the issue of health care.

"I think it is greater now, but I don't think it is restricted only to the governors," Douglas said. "I think there is a lot of concern that Congress is failing to act.

"I did assume we would have a federal bill by now," Douglas said.

 

Related News

Related News

More young Canadians would work in electricity… if they knew about it

Generation Impact Report reveals how Canada's electricity sector can recruit Millennials and Gen Z, highlighting…
View more

Ontario prepares to extend disconnect moratoriums for residential electricity customers

Ontario Electricity Relief outlines an extended disconnect moratorium, potential time-of-use price changes, and Ontario Energy…
View more

Atlantic grids, forestry, coastlines need rethink in era of intense storms: experts

Atlantic Canada Hurricane Resilience focuses on climate change adaptation: grid hardening, burying lines, coastline resiliency…
View more

California Regulators Face Calls for Action as Electricity Bills Soar

California Electricity Rate Hikes strain households as CPUC weighs fixed charges, utility profit caps, and…
View more

France nuclear power stations to limit energy output due to high river temps

France Nuclear Heatwave Restrictions signal reduced nuclear power along the Rhone River as EDF imposes…
View more

Gaza’s sole electricity plant shuts down after running out of fuel

Gaza Power Plant Shutdown underscores the Gaza Strip's fuel ban, Israeli blockade, and electricity crisis,…
View more

Sign Up for Electricity Forum’s Newsletter

Stay informed with our FREE Newsletter — get the latest news, breakthrough technologies, and expert insights, delivered straight to your inbox.

Electricity Today T&D Magazine Subscribe for FREE

Stay informed with the latest T&D policies and technologies.
  • Timely insights from industry experts
  • Practical solutions T&D engineers
  • Free access to every issue

Live Online & In-person Group Training

Advantages To Instructor-Led Training – Instructor-Led Course, Customized Training, Multiple Locations, Economical, CEU Credits, Course Discounts.

Request For Quotation

Whether you would prefer Live Online or In-Person instruction, our electrical training courses can be tailored to meet your company's specific requirements and delivered to your employees in one location or at various locations.