Pritzker doesn’t expect electricity brownouts as some industry experts
warn
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[May 16, 2022] By
Greg Bishop | The Center Square
(The Center Square) – Despite a House
committee planning to continue hearings into expected problems with part
of the state’s energy grid, Gov. J.B. Pritzker said he doesn’t expect
brownouts.
Last month, Ameren Illinois warned consumers their utility bills may
increase. There are also concerns that wind and solar sectors are not
generating the amounts of energy needed. Some even speculate there could
be rolling brownouts.
“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, president and chief operating officer of Midcontinent
Independent System Operator (MISO), said in a statement last month.
“From a consumer perspective, those zones may also face higher costs to
procure power when it is scarce.”
Pritzker said he doesn’t expect brownouts, adding power can be bought
from other states.
“Nobody should think that what we passed in [the state’s clean energy
law] is reducing the amount of energy that we are able to provide across
the state of Illinois,” he said. “What we are doing is incentivizing the
creation of more energy production in our state. That’s what’s going
on.”
The Clean Energy Jobs Act approved last summer gives hundreds of
millions of dollars in ratepayer subsidies to nuclear energy generation
and hundreds of millions more in subsidies are lined up for so-called
clean energy. There are also deadlines to retire coal-fired power plants
that some say disincentivizes investment.
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Others were critical of the state’s clean energy law for restrictions on
sources that are available now, like natural gas.
“So, natural gas generation is not able to run for a full 12-month
period because they are capped by the greenhouse gas emission
standards,” Melville Nickerson with NRG Energy said during a committee
hearing earlier this month. “That acts to reduce supply to meet demand.”
Pritzker acknowledged that part of the state where nuclear power
received taxpayer subsidies will see lower utility bills. He said he’s
looking at ways to lower bills for areas downstate that are expecting
higher costs this summer.
State Rep. Larry Walsh Jr., D-Elwood, said earlier this month, that
lawmakers intend to continue House hearings on the state’s clean energy
law.
“This just, we can’t do a lightswitch, so we need to find sensible
solutions to get us to where we want to go and that’s going to take time
and that’s going to take a lot of heartache, I think, but I think we can
get there if we work together,” Walsh said.
Illinois Manufacturers’ Association President and CEO Mark Denzler said
the law needs to be amended – especially to help manufacturers, which
are large users of energy.
“Large and sophisticated companies should be able to create programs
that meet their needs,” Denzler told lawmakers. “This energy is not
provided back to the market. They’re used specifically on their local
campuses leading to reduced energy costs and lower emissions.”
The next hearing has yet to be scheduled.
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 |