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Renewable energy nears law status 

Four months after saying his “New Energy Economy” was more than a campaign promise, Gov. Bill Ritter will sign a half-dozen measures this week encouraging Coloradans to make more renewable energy and consume less fuel overall.

On Tuesday, Ritter signed a bill that rewards utilities for promoting energy conservation. It was vetoed twice by his predecessor, GOP Gov. Bill Owens.

Today, Ritter plans to sign measures to promote recycling and biofuels development, encourage construction of transmission lines from solar and wind farms and provide tax credits for renewable energy.

They are among 18 measures pushed through the Legislature this session with bipartisan support. Ritter made renewable energy a key part of his election campaign last year, and in his State of the State speech in January he said he wanted to make the state a leader in the field.

“All we’re missing is a state government to lead, to inspire and to invest,” he said then.

Environmentalists said they got almost everything they wanted this year, except for one component, a net metering bill that would require utilities to buy electricity from customers who produce their own renewable energy. They said they will try again next year to pass that bill.

“We absolutely made significant progress this year. We doubled Colorado’s commitment to increase the amount of electricity from renewable energy, we have legislation that could cut in half the increase in demand from Xcel Energy and we removed some of the barriers to building new transmission lines,” said Will Coyne, program director with Environment Colorado, a coalition of environmental groups that pushed this year’s agenda.

Backers of the bill signed Tuesday said it will do more to cut energy consumption than any of the other renewable energy bills passed this year. They estimated it could cut energy bills by $1.2 billion over the next 13 years and eliminate the need for a new 350-megawatt power plant.

Howard Geller, executive director of the Boulder-based Southwest Energy Efficiency Project, said reducing energy consumption requires a one-two punch that increases development of renewable energy and reduces the amount of energy needed.

“This is the punch that will really bring home the economic benefit for the consumers,” he said.

Bill sponsor Rep. Claire Levy, D-Boulder, said the programs would save enough natural gas to power 146,000 homes a year by 2020. She said her bill would allow major utilities to offer incentives for installing heat-efficient windows and water heaters, and to reward consumers and builders of energy-efficient homes with rebates and incentives.

The bill will allow utilities to add 50 cents a month to residential utility bills to pay for the programs.

Summary of renewable energy bills passed this year

By The Associated Press

* Provide funds for wind energy projects at public schools and community colleges. (House Bill 1087.)

* Increase renewable energy requirements approved by Colorado voters in 2004 to include all utilities, except municipally owned operations with fewer than 40,000 customers. (House Bill 1281.)

* Allow local governments to offer a tax credit or rebate to residential or commercial property owners who produce electricity from renewable resources. (Senate Bill 145.)

* Require the State Board of Land Commissioners to identify land under its control suitable for developing renewable energy. (House Bill 1145.)

* Require investor-owned natural gas distributors and electric utilities to adopt plans for energy efficiency, conservation, load management and demand response programs. (House Bill 1037.)

* Establish grants for research projects. (House Bill 1060.)

* Require local governments to adopt and enforce a building energy code that meets or exceeds the 2003 International Energy Conservation Code standard. (House Bill 1146.)

* Create the Colorado Clean Energy Development Authority to issue loans and grants to increase the production and consumption of clean energy resources. (House Bill 1150.)

* Require cooperative electric utilities and customer-generators to begin setting up net metering systems that allow a customers’ electricity consumption to be offset by electricity they generate from renewable resources. Critics say it doesn’t go far enough and should be revisited next year. (House Bill 1169.)

* Require the state to buy flexible-fuel vehicles by 2008. (House Bill 1228.)

* Exempt machinery used to produce electricity from renewable resources from state sales and use taxes. (House Bill 1279.)

* Create a Renewable Resource Generation Development Area Task Force to identify areas with potential to develop renewable energy projects. (Senate Bill 91.)

* Create the Clean Energy Fund from gambling revenues. (Senate Bill 246.)

By Steven K. Paulson
Associated Press Writer

Journal-Advocate

journal-advocate.com

23 May 2007

This article is the work of the source indicated. Any opinions expressed in it are not necessarily those of National Wind Watch.

The copyright of this article resides with the author or publisher indicated. As part of its noncommercial educational effort to present the environmental, social, scientific, and economic issues of large-scale wind power development to a global audience seeking such information, National Wind Watch endeavors to observe “fair use” as provided for in section 107 of U.S. Copyright Law and similar “fair dealing” provisions of the copyright laws of other nations. Send requests to excerpt, general inquiries, and comments via e-mail.

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