Amid warnings of electricity price hikes and possible brownouts,
Illinois legislators look for fixes
Send a link to a friend
[May 05, 2022] By
Greg Bishop | The Center Square
(The Center Square) – Illinois legislators
are looking at how to modify the state’s clean energy laws amid warnings
of electricity price hikes and possible rolling brownouts coming this
summer to central and southern Illinois, but it may be too late.
Last month, Ameren Illinois said energy experts say solar and wind
energy has not kept pace with generation capacity lost as fossil fuel
plants retire.
“The high clearing price from the [Midcontinent Independent System
Operator] capacity auction could add as much as $13 per month to the
supply portion of a typical customer's electric bill,” a statement from
Ameren said.
“The reality for zones that do not have sufficient generation to cover
their load plus their required reserves is that they will have increased
risk of temporary, controlled outages to maintain system reliability,”
Clair Moeller, MISO’s president and chief operating officer, said in
statement days before. “From a consumer perspective, those zones may
also face higher costs to procure power when it is scarce.”
During an Illinois House committee hearing Wednesday, Melville Nickerson
with NRG Energy said those prospects are alarming.
“The higher energy costs that are unfolding in our state, as well as the
potential for rolling blackouts in central and southern Illinois,”
Nickerson said.
He’s advocating for changes found in House Amendment 8 in Senate Bill
3866 to the state’s energy law to encourage more flexibility.
J.C. Kibbey with the Natural Resources Defense Council told the
committee the problems impacting coal power have been years in the
making and the state’s clean energy law is clear with timelines to close
coal fired plants by 2045.
[to top of second column]
|
“Is there a role for very efficient fossil fuel energy between now and
then, yes, and we’ve acknowledged that in the law,” Kibbey said. “But
continuing to burn fossil fuels after the timeline we’ve set out is not
in the spirit of the law.”
Illinois Manufacturers’ Association’s Mark Denzler told lawmakers the
situation is repelling investment in Illinois.
“And I can’t tell you enough the number of companies I hear from across
the state that say ‘we are losing our energy advantage, we are losing
that battle,’ and it’s one of the few things we have at our advantage,
and we are giving it away,” Denzler said.
More hearings on the issue are expected over the summer in what
committee chair state Rep. Larry Walsh Jr., D-Elwood, said is an attempt
to find a balance and not go off a cliff.
State Rep. Tim Butler, R-Springfield, said the die is cast on what he
called a decade-long “war on coal,” driving up costs and reducing energy
reliability leading to possible brownouts.
“And if businesses are making decisions because the energy is not
reliable, and the energy costs are through the roof, well that’s a
problem for downstate because we’re gonna lose jobs and we’re going to
continue to see population declines in Illinois,” Butler said.
Butler speculates that if voters are told they can’t turn their air
conditioning on during the hottest parts of the summer, or can’t turn
their lights on, there will be political ramifications come November,
when the general midterm election is scheduled.
Outside of committees, lawmakers aren’t expected back for fall session
to take legislative action until after the November election.
Greg Bishop reports on Illinois government and other
issues for The Center Square. Bishop has years of award-winning
broadcast experience and hosts the WMAY Morning Newsfeed out of
Springfield. |