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Regional Greenhouse Gas Initiative (HB 1434) Presentation to House Science, Technology, & Energy Committee January 10, 2007 New Hampshire Department of Environmental Services Thomas S. Burack, Commissioner Robert R. Scott, Director Air Resources Division

Regional Greenhouse Gas Initiative (HB 1434) Presentation to House Science, Technology, & Energy Committee January 10, 2007 New Hampshire Department of

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Page 1: Regional Greenhouse Gas Initiative (HB 1434) Presentation to House Science, Technology, & Energy Committee January 10, 2007 New Hampshire Department of

Regional Greenhouse Gas Initiative (HB 1434)

Presentation toHouse Science, Technology, & Energy Committee

January 10, 2007New Hampshire Department of Environmental

Services Thomas S. Burack, Commissioner

Robert R. Scott, Director Air Resources Division

Page 2: Regional Greenhouse Gas Initiative (HB 1434) Presentation to House Science, Technology, & Energy Committee January 10, 2007 New Hampshire Department of

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Climate ChangeImpacts on New Hampshire

• Trends indicate NH is experiencing impacts now

• Extreme storm events

• More rain in winter• Less snow cover

Average Winter Temperature in the Northeast 1899-2000

Time series represent areally weighted average of 56 meteorological stations.

Page 3: Regional Greenhouse Gas Initiative (HB 1434) Presentation to House Science, Technology, & Energy Committee January 10, 2007 New Hampshire Department of

Flooding in NH

October 2005 May 2006April 2007

• Peak flows in many rivers greater than 100 year flood

• Millions of dollars in state and individual losses

Page 4: Regional Greenhouse Gas Initiative (HB 1434) Presentation to House Science, Technology, & Energy Committee January 10, 2007 New Hampshire Department of

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Future Economic Impacts to New HampshireNortheast Climate Impacts Assessment (2007)

By late in the century (without reducing GHG emissions)

• Winter snow season cut in half• Sea-level rise up to nearly three feet• More than 60 days with temperatures over 90°F in

most cities • 4 to 28 days with temperatures over 100°F

(compared with one or two days per year historically).

Page 5: Regional Greenhouse Gas Initiative (HB 1434) Presentation to House Science, Technology, & Energy Committee January 10, 2007 New Hampshire Department of

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What if we don’t act now to reduce green-house gases?

Page 6: Regional Greenhouse Gas Initiative (HB 1434) Presentation to House Science, Technology, & Energy Committee January 10, 2007 New Hampshire Department of

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Global Cost of No Action(Stern Review UK Treasury 2006)

• Extreme weather alone – 0.5-1% world GDP annually• Total cost of taking no action equivalent to reduction

in consumption per head of 5-20% annually• Less costly to take actions now than to delay• Risk to world economy on the order of multi-national

world conflict• Insurance market already reacting

Page 7: Regional Greenhouse Gas Initiative (HB 1434) Presentation to House Science, Technology, & Energy Committee January 10, 2007 New Hampshire Department of

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UK Experience

• All three political parties working together to address climate change

• 1990-1999 14% reduction in GHG emissions; 14.9% increase in economic growth; 5% increase in jobs

• Confederation of British Industry – recent economic report on growth in emerging technologies and energy services (very supportive of climate change policies)

• Specific examples of companies transforming from skeptics to champions of aggressive energy efficiency policies

Page 8: Regional Greenhouse Gas Initiative (HB 1434) Presentation to House Science, Technology, & Energy Committee January 10, 2007 New Hampshire Department of

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NH CO2 (equivalent) Emissions by Sector

2004

Electric Utilities

34%

Commercial

8%Industrial

7%

Residential

15%

Transportation

34%

Agriculture,

Forestry and

Waste

2%

Transportation

Residential

Industrial

Commercial

Electric Utilities

Agriculture, Forestry

and Waste

Page 9: Regional Greenhouse Gas Initiative (HB 1434) Presentation to House Science, Technology, & Energy Committee January 10, 2007 New Hampshire Department of

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RGGI Cap & Trade Program

• Regional cap on emissions from fossil-fueled power plants >25 megawatts

• Cap (10 state region) 188 million allowances • 1 allowance = 1 ton• NH Budget 8.6 million allowances• Majority of allowances will be sold in regional

auction

Page 10: Regional Greenhouse Gas Initiative (HB 1434) Presentation to House Science, Technology, & Energy Committee January 10, 2007 New Hampshire Department of

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Compliance

• Power plants must have enough allowances to equal their emissions by the end of the three year period

• Can buy allowances (regional auction) or offset allowances

• Unlimited banking of allowances

Page 11: Regional Greenhouse Gas Initiative (HB 1434) Presentation to House Science, Technology, & Energy Committee January 10, 2007 New Hampshire Department of

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RGGI impact on NH

• 9 other states going forward with RGGI

• Regional energy prices will be affected by RGGI whether NH participates or not

• Only way to mitigate costs is to participate and use auction revenues

Page 12: Regional Greenhouse Gas Initiative (HB 1434) Presentation to House Science, Technology, & Energy Committee January 10, 2007 New Hampshire Department of

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Regional Leadership

• Driving federal action• Western Climate Initiative• Mid-western initiative (Illinois, Iowa, Kansas,

Minnesota, Michigan, Wisconsin, and Manitoba)

• Investment in more efficient energy market is positive for NH regardless of climate change

Page 13: Regional Greenhouse Gas Initiative (HB 1434) Presentation to House Science, Technology, & Energy Committee January 10, 2007 New Hampshire Department of

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RGGI is Significant

• RGGI would represent the seventh highest emitting developed country

• The RGGI cap (188,076,976 tons) is similar to the emissions of Australia, France, or Italy

• There is no “silver bullet” but RGGI is part of the “silver buckshot”

Page 14: Regional Greenhouse Gas Initiative (HB 1434) Presentation to House Science, Technology, & Energy Committee January 10, 2007 New Hampshire Department of

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Benefits of HB 1434• Helps to mitigate long-term energy costs via greater

investment in energy efficiency

• Creates a market signal that encourages development of cleaner and, in many cases, more local energy sources

• Increases our energy independence with more local energy sources: keeping more dollars local

• Starts to mitigate our GHG emissions to avoid the most deleterious projections of climate change impacts

Page 15: Regional Greenhouse Gas Initiative (HB 1434) Presentation to House Science, Technology, & Energy Committee January 10, 2007 New Hampshire Department of

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Downside of not joining RGGI• Roughly half of NH’s supply is purchased from

the regional market

• As a consequence, NH electric prices will be affected by RGGI

• No benefit of sale of NH allowances

• No seat at table – no influence on program

Page 16: Regional Greenhouse Gas Initiative (HB 1434) Presentation to House Science, Technology, & Energy Committee January 10, 2007 New Hampshire Department of

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Energy Efficiency – Regional Priority

• Record peak demand in summer >28,000 MW• Peak demand increase twice as fast as average load

growth• Costly new capacity may be needed to meet demand

reached for only a few hours or days our of the year• Reducing electricity use by 5% during peak times

will save consumers $580 million a year (ISO – NE June 2006)

Page 17: Regional Greenhouse Gas Initiative (HB 1434) Presentation to House Science, Technology, & Energy Committee January 10, 2007 New Hampshire Department of

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Major Potential for Energy Efficiency Improvements

• RGGI bill proposing a “fuel-neutral” fund

• Technology continuing to improve

• Recognize opportunities vary

• Increased energy efficiency overall – can avoid costly new capacity – reducing everyone’s energy costs

Page 18: Regional Greenhouse Gas Initiative (HB 1434) Presentation to House Science, Technology, & Energy Committee January 10, 2007 New Hampshire Department of

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Light Bulb Evolution

Incandescent CFL CFL Cold Cathode LEDElectric Demand 100 Watts 25 Watts 18 Watts 8 Watts 2.2 WattsHours Use 4 hrs/day x 365 4 hrs/day x 365 4 hrs/day x 365 4 hrs/day x 365 4 hrs/day x 365Annual kWh Usage 146 37 26 12 3Annual kWh Savings 110 120 134 143Annual Cost (@ $0.149) $21.75 $5.44 $3.92 $1.74 $0.48Annual $ Savings $16.32 $17.84 $20.01 $21.28

Annual CO2 Reduction (lbs) 121 133 149 158

Page 19: Regional Greenhouse Gas Initiative (HB 1434) Presentation to House Science, Technology, & Energy Committee January 10, 2007 New Hampshire Department of

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Fluorescent Light Evolution

34–40 Watts 32 Watts 28 Watts

1950’s – 1980’s late 1980’s – 1990’s Last 5 yrs

Page 20: Regional Greenhouse Gas Initiative (HB 1434) Presentation to House Science, Technology, & Energy Committee January 10, 2007 New Hampshire Department of

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ISO-NE Comments (D. LaPlante presentation 11-9-07)

Should RGGI work?Yes – markets have helped meet environmental policy objectives• Transparent prices enable potential investors to determine

value of projects and allowances• Open access encourages a large number of developers to

participate in markets• Stakeholder process enable market changes to meet policy

objectives• Regional Transmission Planning provides a for(u)m to support

Page 21: Regional Greenhouse Gas Initiative (HB 1434) Presentation to House Science, Technology, & Energy Committee January 10, 2007 New Hampshire Department of

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ISO-NE Comments (D. LaPlante presentation 11-9-07)

RGGI rules compatible with continued reliable operation of the system

• Allowances are not required before the fact to generate• Generators have many opportunities to acquire allowances

– Before the fact in auctions or the secondary market– After the fact in two month window after close of

compliance period– As a last resort, future allowances at a rate of 3 future

allowances for 1 current period allowances can be used

Page 22: Regional Greenhouse Gas Initiative (HB 1434) Presentation to House Science, Technology, & Energy Committee January 10, 2007 New Hampshire Department of

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UNH Economic Analysis 2007

• NH participation is lower cost overall to NH than not joining

• Lowest long-term net utility cost is to auction allowances and put revenues into energy efficiency

• Positive impact on employment and the overall NH economy

Page 23: Regional Greenhouse Gas Initiative (HB 1434) Presentation to House Science, Technology, & Energy Committee January 10, 2007 New Hampshire Department of

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Net Rate Impact – All NH Utilities 

2009 2012 2015 2018

Allowance Price $ 2 $ 4 $ 6 $ 8

100% Efficiency $ 14,376,318 $ 13,659,299 $ (1,800,436) $(31,968,822)

Don't Join $ 6,769,305 $ 14,922,360 $ 24,575,400 $ 35,806,006

Net Change from Joining RGGI $7,607,013 ($1,263,061) ($26,375,836) ($67,774,828)

Page 24: Regional Greenhouse Gas Initiative (HB 1434) Presentation to House Science, Technology, & Energy Committee January 10, 2007 New Hampshire Department of

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Average Monthly Change Residential Household Bill - All NH Utilities

2009 2012 2015 2018

Allowance Price $ 2 $ 4 $ 6 $8

100% Efficiency $ 0.76 $ 0.69 $(0.09) $ (1.46)

Don't Join $0.36 $ 0.75 $1.18 $ 1.63

Net Change from Joining RGGI $0.40 ($0.06) ($1.27) ($3.09)

Page 25: Regional Greenhouse Gas Initiative (HB 1434) Presentation to House Science, Technology, & Energy Committee January 10, 2007 New Hampshire Department of

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Potential Mitigation of Monthly Business Electricity Costs

2009 2012 2013 2015 2018

Small Business

$1.29 $(0.20) $(1.90) $(4.00) $(9.78)

Large Business

$159 $(25) $(234) $(493) $(1,205)

% Change

0.4% -0.07% -0.6% -1.3% -3.2%

Net change from 100% investment in energy efficiency compared to not joining RGGI

Page 26: Regional Greenhouse Gas Initiative (HB 1434) Presentation to House Science, Technology, & Energy Committee January 10, 2007 New Hampshire Department of

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Opportunity for Economic Development

• NH tradition of innovation and leadership

• NH needs to foster R&D development of new technologies and related ancillary services

• Current examples – Power Span

– GT Solar

Page 27: Regional Greenhouse Gas Initiative (HB 1434) Presentation to House Science, Technology, & Energy Committee January 10, 2007 New Hampshire Department of

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Regional Greenhouse Gas Initiative (www.rggi.org)

• Clean Power Act – Cap on PSNH fossil fuel units (Bow, Portsmouth,

Newington) – 5,425,866 tons

• RGGI – 10 state MOU– PSNH (Bow, Portsmouth, Newington)

– Granite Ridge (Londonderry)

– Newington Energy (Newington)– 8,620,460 tons

Page 28: Regional Greenhouse Gas Initiative (HB 1434) Presentation to House Science, Technology, & Energy Committee January 10, 2007 New Hampshire Department of

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RGGI Cap Levels

• 2-Phase CO2 Caps (gradual, keeps cost low)– stabilization 2009 – 2014 (no absolute

reductions, but reductions from business-as-usual)

• Phase I Regional Cap = 188,076,976 tons• Phase I NH Budget = 8,620,460 tons

– 10% reduction 2015 - 2018 • (2.5% per year for 4 years)

• Built-in Review of Program in 2012

Page 29: Regional Greenhouse Gas Initiative (HB 1434) Presentation to House Science, Technology, & Energy Committee January 10, 2007 New Hampshire Department of

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RGGI Compliance Options

• Stabilize/Reduce EmissionsEnergy efficiencyFuel switchingChanges in dispatchEmerging control technologies

– GreenFuel Emissions-to-Biofuels system

– CO2 capture & underground injection

• Buy allowances or offsets

Page 30: Regional Greenhouse Gas Initiative (HB 1434) Presentation to House Science, Technology, & Energy Committee January 10, 2007 New Hampshire Department of

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Types of RGGI Allowances

• Budgeted allowances purchased at auction

• Early Reduction: Emission reductions made prior to the start of a program.

• CO2 Offsets: A reduction from an activity (sector) outside or different than the activity (sector) being regulated.

Page 31: Regional Greenhouse Gas Initiative (HB 1434) Presentation to House Science, Technology, & Energy Committee January 10, 2007 New Hampshire Department of

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RGGI Offsets

• 1st set – methane capture, reduced loss of SF6 (electric equipment insulator), afforestation, end-use efficiency

• 2nd set – forest management• Limited to 3.3% of each source’s emissions• Offsets may come from RGGI region or from another

US state • Safety valves built in to increase use of offsets for

economic relief if necessary

Page 32: Regional Greenhouse Gas Initiative (HB 1434) Presentation to House Science, Technology, & Energy Committee January 10, 2007 New Hampshire Department of

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• 3-Year Compliance Period

• Banking (with typical tracking, monitoring, recordkeeping, and reporting requirements)

• Early Reduction Allowances

Compliance Flexibility Mechanisms

Page 33: Regional Greenhouse Gas Initiative (HB 1434) Presentation to House Science, Technology, & Energy Committee January 10, 2007 New Hampshire Department of

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House Bill 1434

• Includes all major provision of MOU

• Conversion of PSNH allowances under the Clean Power Act

• Proposes to auction remaining allowances

• Revenues to be used for energy efficiency

• Clean Power Act provisions will end 12-31-2008

Page 34: Regional Greenhouse Gas Initiative (HB 1434) Presentation to House Science, Technology, & Energy Committee January 10, 2007 New Hampshire Department of

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125-O:20 Establishing a Trading Program

• State budget of 8,620,460 tons (03-04 average emissions)

• By 2018, 7,758,414 tons• Applicable to all fossil-fueled generation > 25

Megawatts• Auction allowances (except those grandfathered to

PSNH as a result of Clean Power Act)• Can grant Early Reduction Allowances (Northern

Wood Project) • Can accept eligible offset allowances

Page 35: Regional Greenhouse Gas Initiative (HB 1434) Presentation to House Science, Technology, & Energy Committee January 10, 2007 New Hampshire Department of

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125-O:21 Compliance

• Power plants must have enough allowances to equal their emissions over a three year period

• Can buy allowances (regional auction) or offset allowances

• Limit on use of offset allowances

• Unlimited banking

Page 36: Regional Greenhouse Gas Initiative (HB 1434) Presentation to House Science, Technology, & Energy Committee January 10, 2007 New Hampshire Department of

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Limit on use of offset allowances• Allowance price <$7.00 (2005 dollars) – 3.3% • Allowance price >$7.00 but <$10.00 – 5% • Allowance price >$10.00 – can use for 10%

of their compliance obligation– compliance period extended to four years– can use European Union Emission

Trading allowances or Kyoto Clean Development Mechanism offset credits

Page 37: Regional Greenhouse Gas Initiative (HB 1434) Presentation to House Science, Technology, & Energy Committee January 10, 2007 New Hampshire Department of

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125-O:22 Greenhouse Gas Emissions Reduction Fund

• Administered by NH PUC with an advisory board• Used for energy efficiency, conservation, and demand

response • State administrative costs and to pay NH’s

contribution to RGGI regional organization• At least 5% of monies shall be used to assist low-

income residential customers to reduce total energy use (fuel neutral)

Page 38: Regional Greenhouse Gas Initiative (HB 1434) Presentation to House Science, Technology, & Energy Committee January 10, 2007 New Hampshire Department of

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Criteria for use of fund

• reduce GHG emissions from all fuels used to provide electricity, heating and cooling

• cost-effective• reduce peak electric load• promote market transformation, innovation, and

energy cost savings

Page 39: Regional Greenhouse Gas Initiative (HB 1434) Presentation to House Science, Technology, & Energy Committee January 10, 2007 New Hampshire Department of

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125-O:23 Conversion of Clean Power Act Allowances (PSNH)

• Capitol investment converted to the number of allowances that investment would have been able to pay on the “market”

• Unused allowances from 2007 and 2008 (PSNH emissions < Clean Power Act cap of 5,425,866)

• Emission reductions from the Northern Wood Project (will be granted as Early Reduction Allowances) – about 300,000 tons per year

Page 40: Regional Greenhouse Gas Initiative (HB 1434) Presentation to House Science, Technology, & Energy Committee January 10, 2007 New Hampshire Department of

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125-O:24 Set Aside for Voluntary Purchases of RECs

• Up to 1% of allowances set aside to retire emissions for voluntary REC purchases – if not used in any one year, put up for auction

• NH and NE businesses buy RECs to reduce their carbon emissions

• This provision protects the value of the RECs developed in NH, otherwise they will not be “certified” and have little or no value

Page 41: Regional Greenhouse Gas Initiative (HB 1434) Presentation to House Science, Technology, & Energy Committee January 10, 2007 New Hampshire Department of

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Contacts

Tom Burack [email protected]

271- 2958

Bob Scott [email protected]

271-1088

Joanne Morin [email protected]

271-5552