Jul
15
Southern Company Research and Environmental Affairs SVP Chris Hobson to Address Senate Roundtable
Filed Under Carbon Capture and Storage | Comments Off
Chris Hobson, Senior Vice President, Research and Environmental Affairs, Southern Company, today will detail steps under way to preserve coal, which represents half of our nation’s electricity supply, as an important part of the future U.S. energy mix through the development and deployment of cleaner coal technologies such as carbon capture and storage (CCS). The roundtable discussion, “What is the Future of Coal in the Context of HR 2454, The American Clean Energy and Security Act of 2009?,” will be hosted by U.S. Sens. Tom Carper, (D-Del.), and George Voinovich, (R-Ohio).
In his remarks, Hobson, who leads the company’s efforts in the research and development of next-generation technologies to maintain a reliable and affordable supply of energy while reducing environmental impact, will reiterate Southern Company’s support for comprehensive federal legislation to address climate change.
Additionally, Hobson will note, linking climate and energy policy with the federal government’s ability to provide incentives for the development and deployment of needed technologies to meet our energy goals is crucial, and coal with CCS is a prime example of the need for incentives to promote and advance its role in the energy mix.
Moreover, Hobson will emphasize Southern Company’s view that the Congress is the ideal forum to set national energy and climate policy and as it will help avoid the uncertainty and duplication that could result from disparate efforts from a variety of state and regulatory agencies with differing policies and responsibilities.
Southern Company believes there are key elements that must be included in any federal legislative proposal. These include:
- Targets and timetable for meeting reductions in greenhouse gases must be aligned with the ability to develop and deploy the key technologies that will be needed to meet climate and energy goals. All energy sources, including energy efficiency, renewables, natural gas, nuclear and coal, will be needed, with the sources that currently provide base load electric power — nuclear and coal — must continue to be a key part of the nation’s energy mix.
- Credits under a cap and trade regime should be allocated to regulated entities in ways that minimize costs to energy consumers while also protecting against windfalls.
- Until key technologies like advanced nuclear and carbon capture and sequestration can be widely deployed mechanisms to constrain the cost impacts of a carbon cap should be integrated.
- A provision like a price collar with a floor and ceiling for carbon prices will be needed to protect energy consumers.
- Flexibility must be built into any climate policy that would give regulated entities options with which to comply with reduction targets. A key example of this is the use of offsets. Offsets that are real and verifiable should be available for use whether from domestic or international sources.
- Federal climate legislation should preempt duplicative and possibly contradictory state and federal policies. A regulated entity can’t face a future with possibly 50 different state climate regulatory programs or multiple climate decision points from numerous federal laws and regulations whether from the Clean Air Act, or from laws such as the Clean Water Act and the Endangered Species Act.
- Legal, liability and property rights issues related to carbon sequestration must be addressed. Without a clear legal and regulatory path forward it is problematic whether regulated entities will want to undertake sequestration of CO2 on a large scale. This could be a larger barrier to carbon capture and sequestration than the technological challenges of capture alone.
With 4.4 million customers and more than 42,000 megawatts of generating capacity, Atlanta-based Southern Company is the premier energy company serving the Southeast. A leading U.S. producer of electricity, Southern Company owns electric utilities in four states and a growing competitive generation company, as well as fiber optics and wireless communications. Southern Company brands are known for excellent customer service, high reliability and retail electric prices that are below the national average. Southern Company is consistently listed among the top U.S. electric service providers in customer satisfaction by the American Customer Satisfaction Index (ACSI). Visit our Web site at www.southerncompany.com.
Jul
1
ACCCE Statement Regarding DOE Clean Coal Technology Grants $408 Million in Recovery Act Funding for New Technologies to Advance Carbon Capture and Storage
Filed Under Carbon Capture and Storage | Comments Off
U.S. Department of Energy Secretary Steven Chu announced today that projects by Basin Electric Power Cooperative and Hydrogen Energy International LLC have been selected for up to $408 million in funding from the American Recovery and Reinvestment Act. The two projects selected — an existing power plant in North Dakota and a new facility in California — will incorporate advanced technologies to reduce carbon dioxide (CO2) emissions. In response to the awarding of these grants, Steve Miller, President and CEO of the American Coalition for Clean Coal Electricity (ACCCE) issued the following statement: Read more
Mar
2
ACCCE Statement Regarding Organized Demonstration
Filed Under Cap and Trade, Carbon Capture and Storage, Clean Coal | Comments Off
America is engaged in a critical debate about how to break out of a deep recession, meet the nation’s growing energy needs, and continue to protect the environment. The American Coalition for Clean Coal Electricity (ACCCE) believes that economic prosperity, energy security, and environmental protection are fundamentally linked and equally important.
Accordingly, ACCCE embraces policies that 1) create jobs, 2) promote greater energy independence, 3) Read more
Feb
22
Canada’s oil sands producers have tough choice
Filed Under Canada's Oil Sands, Carbon Capture and Storage, Carbon Tax, Obama, US Carbon Cap and Trade | Comments Off
Canada’s oil sands producers face a dilemma in dealing with their carbon emissions - spend billions of dollars on unproven carbon capture and storage technology, or take it on the chin when the US decides to regulate carbon either through a carbon tax or carbon trading scheme. Either outcome ain’t purty: Read more