Existing Emissions Laws Could Cut U.S. Footprint Without Climate Bill

A day after the Senate pulled the plug on a comprehensive climate bill, a new report shows the U.S. could reduce greenhouse gas emissions 14 percent below 2005 levels by 2020 by aggressively using existing state and federal policies.

A 14 percent reduction, however, falls short of President Barack Obama’s Copenhagen commitment, as well the emissions reduction targets put forth in the most recent climate legislation that was put forth and failed over the last year. It also pales in comparison to the cuts most scientists say is needed to avoid the worst effects of climate change.

“The study highlights both the need to pass climate legislation and the importance of preserving existing authorities,” Jonathan Lash, president of the World Resources Institute, which wrote the report, said in a statement. “The study’s findings make it very clear that current efforts by Congress to curb U.S. EPA authority will undermine U.S. competitiveness in a clean energy world economy, block control of dangerous pollutants, and put the U.S. at odds with its allies.”

As Lash alluded to, the 14 percent reduction calculated by WRI is far from assured, given recent attacks on the EPA and state laws. Sen. Lisa Murkowski (R-Alaska), for example, tried and failed to rein in the EPA’s authority to regulate greenhouse gas emissions, while a push from Big Oil-funded organizations in California put the fate of the state’s aggressive climate change law on the November ballot. At the same time, some have backed off participation in regional emissions trading programs, such as Arizona, which distanced itself from the Western Climate Initiative because of the economic downturn.

The 14 percent reduction would require pushing existing laws and regulations to the fullest extent possible under a set of circumstances the World Resources Institute calls the “go-getter” scenario. The Obama administration and states would have to maintain “steadfast resolve” in order to achieve this upper range of emissions reductions.

The WRI study also evaluated the potential results from three other scenarios: a “lackluster” scenario with efforts in the lower range of what is technically possible; “middle-of-the-road,” based on the medium range of what is technically feasible, with moderate regulatory ambition; and a “business-as-usual” scenario.

It found that “lackluster” state and federal efforts would only push emissions to 6 percent below 2005 levels by 2020, while a “middle-of-the-road” approach would trim emissions 9 percent by 2020.

Keeping concentrations of carbon dioxide emissions below 450 parts per million, considered to be the upper range needed to avoid the worst impacts of climate change (but considered by some to still be too high) would require emissions reductions of 36 percent to 48 percent by 2020.

The most effective tools in the U.S. regulatory arsenal are the Clean Air Act’s mobile source and New Source Performance Standard provisions, its Title VI authority to reduce hydrofluorocarbons, and the Department of Transportation’s vehicle fuel efficiency authority.

Additional state level action would be needed to close the gap, as well as some regulatory policies not included the report, such as transportation planning and forest lands management. Existing tools will also need to be beefed up to meet long-term emissions reduction goals.

Reducing Greenhouse Gas Emissions in the United States Using Existing Federal Authorities and State Action

This report shows how the U.S. could reduce greenhouse gas emissions 14 percent below 2005 levels by 2020 by aggressively using existing state and federal policies.

A 14 percent reduction falls short of President Barack Obama’s Copenhagen commitment, as well the emissions reduction targets put forth in the most recent climate legislation that was put forth and failed over the last year. It also pales in comparison to the cuts most scientists say is needed to avoid the worst effects of climate change.

“The study highlights both the need to pass climate legislation and the importance of preserving existing authorities,” Jonathan Lash, president of the World Resources Institute, which wrote the report, said in a statement. “The study’s findings make it very clear that current efforts by Congress to curb U.S. EPA authority will undermine U.S. competitiveness in a clean energy world economy, block control of dangerous pollutants, and put the U.S. at odds with its allies.”

The 14 percent reduction would require pushing existing laws and regulations to the fullest extent possible under a set of circumstances the World Resources Institute calls the “go-getter” scenario. The Obama administration and states would have to maintain “steadfast resolve” in order to achieve this upper range of emissions reductions.

The WRI study also evaluated the potential results from three other scenarios: a “lackluster” scenario with efforts in the lower range of what is technically possible; “middle-of-the-road,” based on the medium range of what is technically feasible, with moderate regulatory ambition; and a “business-as-usual” scenario.

Energy Efficiency Forum 2010: Finding the Formula for Progress Buildings

On the heels of President Obama’s Oval Office speech marrying the BP oil spill with American’s fossil fuel dependency, energy cognoscenti gathered in Washington today to discuss the state of play on the most near-term, cost-effective step the country can take to cut that dependence — energy efficiency.

Efficiency has been the “duh” of the energy world for decades. Yet, despite the fact that many investments in improved efficiency pay for themselves in just a few years, and even with a handful of federal and regional incentive programs and public education campaigns in place, there remains tremendous unrealized potential.

“Energy efficiency is the fifth fuel,” said retired Senator Timothy Wirth, who was a key author of the 1990 cap-and-trade program for sulfur dioxide and is now president of the United Nations Foundation and Better World Fund. “Efficiency is one of the things that unites people and that we can and must get done now.”

The conversation at the 21st annual Energy Efficiency Forum centered on two key ways of seizing the potential of efficiency: government leadership and behavioral science.

“This is a new Sputnik moment — not only because of what’s happening in the Gulf, but because of what’s happening in China,” said Rep. Steve Israel, D-N.Y. His call for an ambitious presidential vision akin to President John Kennedy’s 10-year plan to put a man on the moon was a refrain among both political and industry leaders.

“We’ve had 30 years of half-steps, back-steps, missteps, no steps,” Israel said. “In that time we’ve doubled oil imports and slashed the R&D budget by 87 percent.”

Aside from the kickstart that an ambitious national goal could give the field, financing remained the focus of proposed federal programs.

Israel, a former member of the House Armed Services Committee who casts clean energy squarely as an issue of national security, is a proponent of PACE (Property Assessed Clean Energy) bonds. The program, which would finance the upfront cost of efficiency measures in commercial and residential property through an annual assessment on the property tax bill, is part of the House-passed climate bill. Israel says PACE bonds would fill in what he calls “the three missing words” — return on investment.

Meanwhile, Senator Jeff Merkley, D-Ore., who rolled out a report with the American Council for an Energy Efficient Economy on Tuesday calling for increased efficiency measures in pending energy legislation, emphasized the importance of low-cost loans and grants.

“If I can pay off the cost of new (efficient) windows with savings from my energy bill, then it’s truly a win-win,” Merkley said.

But economics are not enough, according to Robert Cialdini, a Ph.D. social scientist who specializes on consumer energy choices.

He did a three-year study in which a door tag encouraging energy conservation was placed on the front knobs of 1,000 Californians’ homes encouraging them to conserve energy.

Some of the tags emphasized the environmental benefit of conservation, others exhorted homeowners to think about future generations, another group laid out the potential to reduce power bills, a fourth set simply told homeowners that most of their neighbors were taking conservations measures, and a fifth, control tag encouraged energy savings without making a case for why.

What did Cialdini find?

“We found that just exhorting people to save energy was the same as doing nothing at all,” he said. The environmental, ethical and economic arguments prompted a small savings. But positioning energy conservation as the social norm was the clincher — it snagged energy savings three times the size.

“People follow the lead. They want to know what people as similar as possible to them are doing,” Cialdini explained. “We think, ‘If people like me are doing it, then it’s probably the thing to do.’”

Capitalizing on the potential of the efficiency piece of the energy puzzle will take a combination of behavior change, improved business models and new technology (more on the technology piece in an upcoming post). It may sound like an enigmatic formula today, but more than one speaker drew a parallel to the speed with which cell phones penetrated the market. In 1990, few would have dreamed that the high-priced brick would become the pocket-computer necessity that it is to many today.

“We have too many companies, too many investors sitting on the sidelines now,” Commerce Secretary Gary Locke, recently returned from a clean energy trade mission to China and Indonesia told the forum. “Our challenge is to write a different story.”

Annie Snider is an environment reporter based in Washington, D.C. You can follow her on Twitter @AnnElizabeth18.

Photo by Annie Snider. Commerce Secretary Gary Locke, who led President Obama’s first cabinet-level trade mission to China and Indonesia last month, addresses the 21st annual Energy Efficiency Forum.

Energy companies eye renewables mix to hedge risk

(Reuters) – Investing in a wider range of renewable energy technologies is an effective way for firms to hedge risks, developers said on Wednesday, but only some saw the benefits of including offshore wind power in that mix.

Gulf Oil Spill

Space limitations on land, and higher wind levels at sea are among the key drivers for offshore wind power, said Werner Gotz, general manager of renewables at German utility EnBW, which has started building an offshore farm in the Baltic sea.

“We chose offshore due to the practicality,” Gotz said at the Renewable Energy World conference in Amsterdam. “We already have a huge amount of onshore capacities, and people do not want to have any additional wind parks in their back yard.”

But others saw offshore technology as too costly and risky.

“Why invest in an expensive technology when we have a cheap one onshore?” said Marie-Luise Portner, managing director at renewable energy developer juwi.

Portner said repowering old onshore wind farms, which involves replacing wind turbines with modern alternatives, would limit the amount of extra space needed.

Juwi is focusing on onshore wind, solar and bio energy, but also brings in other technologies such as hydroelectric and geothermal power in certain regions. But Portner said offshore wind did not fit with their aim to decentralize energy.

“Offshore wind is like the conventional energy thinking transferred to the renewables — by building huge centralized plants that do not fit with our idea of how renewables should be developed,” she said.

EnBW’s Gotz said the utility was also developing a combination of mainly wind, solar and biomass, aiming to increase the share of renewables in its energy mix to 20 percent by 2020. It has chosen offshore wind as a key focus.

While recognizing the extra costs involved, Gotz said the higher and more constant wind speeds at sea would prove beneficial in the long-run.

“The benefit will be to generate electricity at times when others cannot generate; this will drive the market price up and then you have the chance to be competitive.”

Gotz said the company was constructing its wind turbines in shallow waters at a close distance to the shore, and choosing experienced partners to build the farms to mitigate risks.

He also felt secure that government subsidy schemes would remain in place for offshore wind projects.

“This amount of capital requires long term clarity and stability: that is one of the critical obligations the politicians have today,” he said.

(Reporting by Catherine Hornby)

US N-trade mission to visit India in January

The largest trade mission of US commercial nuclear executives will visit India next month to develop business alliances for meeting collective energy security demands and enriching technology collaboration.

The United States India Business Council (USIBC) in partnership with the Nuclear Energy Institute and the Department of Commerce have scheduled the visit to India for January.

“US companies are solidly committed to India – to the heart and spirit and soul of the people as was so courageously demonstrated in Mumbai just ten days ago. The time is ripe to develop business alliances that will chart a dramatic course for the future of both our countries in terms of meeting our collective energy security demands, enriching technology collaboration, and protecting the global environment” President of the USIBC Ron Somers said in a statement.

Since rescheduling the mission on November 27, USIBC and Nuclear Energy Institute (NEI) have augmented the delegation with additional leading US commercial nuclear suppliers. In total, the delegation will include more than 50 senior executives representing more than 30 of the world’s leading commercial nuclear companies.

“Courageous action by India’s Government, backed by stalwart US support, culminated in conclusion of the historic deal barely two months ago. US industry, including many of the commercial nuclear suppliers on this mission, provided massive political support for the deal in Washington.

Through the USIBC-led coalition for partnership with India, US industry joined with Indian Americans and policy experts to win final approval by the US Congress for ending India’s nuclear isolation” the top advocacy group has said.

“India’s emergence from 34 years of nuclear isolation is an exemplary achievement. But the resilience and bravery and remarkable restraint demonstrated across the country after the recent terrorist strikes in Mumbai are what make us so proud to be associated with India. US companies look forward, more than ever, to forming linkages with Indian counterparts to share technologies that will benefit all humanity as we strengthen our economic bonds for the 21st century” Somers said.

“US industry is a reliable partner for India, and we are proud to demonstrate again our solidarity,” added USIBC Director Ted Jones. “We are eager to explore, at this more convenient time, how we can partner with India here and around the world.”

The US commercial nuclear industry leads the world in size, performance, innovation, and engineering worldwide. The US is the largest generator of electric power in the world – with 27 per cent of the world’s total installed capacity and nearly double the number of reactors as France.

The US also produces at roughly half to one-third of the cost in other major countries. In recent decades, US reactor companies and civil nuclear engineering companies have remained at the forefront of innovation and engineering worldwide.

The US-India Business Council (USIBC), formed in 1975 under the aegis of the US Chamber of Commerce, is the premier business advocacy organization representing 300 of the largest US companies investing in India, joined by global Indian companies, whose mandate is to deepen US-India commercial ties.(The Indian Express)