Real Greenhouse Gas Emission Reductions and Real Renewable Generation Increases
By California Energy Commission Chair Robert B. Weisenmiller
California’s electricity sector has seen many changes in the last 15 years from decoupling electricity consumption from utility revenues to implementation of a Renewables Portfolio Standard to a multi-sector greenhouse gas emissions reduction target of 1990 levels by 2020. How well are these policies contributing to the ultimate goal of greenhouse gas emissions reductions? Is the electricity sector doing its part to contribute to the emissions reductions needed?
The California Air Resources Board released the 2013 greenhouse gas emissions inventory on June 30, 2015, which showed that emissions fell by 1.5 million metric tons in 2013 compared to 2012 while the economy grew at 2.0 percent, a rate greater than the national average. Much of the reduction in greenhouse gas emissions can be attributed to the electricity sector. In fact, the electricity sector emissions inventory, both in-state and imports, fell a total of 5 million metric tons or 5 percent of total electricity emissions over 2012. In fact the total electricity sector is already about 20 percent below the emissions level of 1990. I think the success in decarbonizing the grid can definitely be attributable to the changes in the electricity sector. These policies have enabled the increase in energy efficiency measures, driven renewable procurement and reduced the reliance on coal power.
It typically takes some period of time before markets catch up to new policies, and despite the negative prognostications of doubters, the markets have responded resoundingly. The following table shows renewable generation from 1983 to 2013.
There are two periods where generation increases are clearly visible. During the period of the 1980s when projects came online as a result of standard contracts and then roughly after 2008, when projects procured under the Renewables Portfolio Standard came online. The sharp increase in renewable energy generation after 2008 correlates well with a sharp decrease in greenhouse gas emissions reductions in the electricity sector.
From 2008 to 2013, renewable generation almost doubled, coal generation reduced by more than half, and greenhouse gas emissions reduced by a quarter.*
*Note: Total System Power should not be used to estimate compliance with the Renewable Portfolio Standard. There are far too many intricacies to the Renewable Portfolio Standard like procurement compliance buckets, historic carry-over rules, calculation of renewable generation over retail sales, etc.
Energy Commission Workshop Touts Community-Scale Renewable Energy Opportunities and Successes
Community-scale
renewable energy may not be a common household phase at the moment, but it is
gaining attention and will be highlighted July 29 during a public workshop at the
California Energy Commission.
Community-scale
energy projects use renewable energy to power relatively small areas such as
college campuses, military installations, business parks or neighborhoods. They
generate less than 20 megawatts, filling a growing energy niche between
individual projects like rooftop solar and large projects like utility-scale
power plants.
The
workshop’s focus is on funding opportunities through the Energy Commission’s Electric Program Investment Charge (EPIC) program. EPIC invests about $120 million annually in technologies that bring clean energy ideas
to market to benefit the ratepayers of California’s three largest electric
investor-owned utilities.
The workshop also spotlights successes and lessons
learned from the more than 20 community-scale projects funded through the
Public Interest Energy Research (PIER) program, which ended in 2013 but serves
as a model for EPIC-funded opportunities.
Participants
include Energy Commission Chairman Robert B. Weisenmiller, Commissioners David
Hochschild and Karen Douglas, the U.S. Department of Energy, state and local
governments, academia and private industry.
The
workshop is from 9:30 a.m. to 5 p.m., in the Art Rosenfeld Hearing Room in the Warren-Alquist
State Energy Building, 1516 Ninth Street, Sacramento. The agenda is posted on the
Energy Commission’s web page, and additional information and directions for
participating remotely through WebEx are in the public notice.
The
Energy Commission encourages disadvantaged and underrepresented businesses and
communities – including disabled veteran-, women-, LGBT- and minority-owned
businesses – to participate in this and other workshops and meetings, and to
engage in and benefit from the state agency’s many programs.