New Jersey regulators approve green plans


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New Jersey Energy Efficiency Programs deliver utility audits and subsidies, cutting peak demand and carbon emissions, creating 965 jobs, and lowering bills by $3-$8 annually across PSE&G, South Jersey Gas, and New Jersey Natural Gas.

 

In This Story

Subsidized utility audits and upgrades that cut energy use, lower emissions, trim bills, and create jobs across New Jersey.

  • $225M supports audits, upgrades, and insulation subsidies
  • Typical home audit costs $125 (vs $300 standard)
  • $1,000 covers labor and materials for improvements
  • 965 jobs in 18 months; 1,302 via accelerated infrastructure
  • Average household cost: $3-$8/year; bill savings for participants

 

New Jersey regulators approved energy efficiency projects from three utilities with a combined value of $225 million, part of the state's drive to create jobs through energy conservation.

 

The work is expected to create 965 jobs over the next 18 months and amid a utility operations surge cost the average New Jersey household $3 to $8 a year, according to the state Board of Public Utilities.

"This is a win, win, win," board president Jeanne Fox said. "It creates jobs, it cuts carbon emissions and it saves customers who participate some money on their bills."

The projects are labor intensive and include subsidized energy audits for New Jersey homes and businesses. A typical home energy audit will cost $125, instead of the normal $300, according to Samuel Wolfe, the board's chief counsel. Additional subsidies, similar to energy-saving home loans will provide $1,000 worth of labor and materials for improvements identified by the voluntary audits, such as insulation.

The result would be reduced energy consumption at peak usage times, when energy providers run their least efficient power plants.

The job creation estimates for the plans from New Jersey Natural Gas, South Jersey Gas, and Public Service Electric and Gas Company (PSE&G) represent the initial wave of direct hiring needed to provide audits to the state's 3.7 million buildings by 2020.

The board is still considering energy efficiency proposals with a combined value of about $80 million from four other New Jersey utilities. It approved $956 million in accelerated infrastructure work April 16, after urging legislators to support investments expected to create 1,302 jobs installing new equipment, like power lines.

The programs are meant to advance a state energy master plan as New Jersey preps for deregulation and calls for 20 percent less energy use by 2020, and 20,000 additional energy industry jobs by 2015.

Commissioner Elizabeth Randall cast the sole dissenting vote on the five member board on both the energy efficiency projects and the earlier infrastructure outlay, which will amid rate hike requests cost customers $9 to $12 a year. She said it's the wrong time to increase the burden on consumers, particularly with the federal stimulus dollars available. The state is in line for $149 million in federal energy stimulus funds.

New Jersey's unemployment rate rose to a 17-year-high of 8.8. percent in May, according to U.S. labor statistics, even as layoffs unlikely at the state's largest utility statewide. That compares with a U.S. jobless rate of 9.4 percent.

"Do we have to do this now?" Randall asked. "I would prefer to see us not funding these rate payer projects during the current recession."

Renters and property owners have equal financial burdens under the plan approved Wednesday, but only owners can approve the audits.

The bulk of the $225 million is ticketed for PSE&G, the state's largest utility, which, alongside plans for $888 million in energy initiatives expects to spend $190 million and create 688 jobs. Twenty-eight hospitals have already expressed interest in its business energy audits, and 12 are already undergoing audits.

Edward Fay, director of facility operations at Robert Wood Johnson University Hospital, said its audit would have cost them another $150,000 without the new program. He said the New Brunswick institution, which employs more than 4,000 people, expects to reduce its consumption by at least 8 percent.

"These auditors are looking at everything under the sun," Fay said. "They're tearing this place apart looking for savings."

 

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